Anonymous wrote:Wrong , the tenant has to deal with whatever the owner sets it to. If she's too child a space heater or blanket, too hot oscillating fan. I would recommend one of those thermostat lock boxes. if she wants her own heat she should buy a house.
Anonymous wrote:How do you know that she reset the temperature to 69 before she left at 9PM? How do you know that she didn't reset it at 2AM when she returned home. Many people learned to turn the temp down at night when everyone is sleeping and under covers. In our house growing up (before programmable thermostats), the rule was the first person who got up turned the temp up and the last person to go to bed, turned it down. And we used 72-74 in the daytime (warmer in the winter because some rooms didn't heat as well) and 68 at night. She maybe she thought to turn the temp down and save money, assuming that you would turn it back up when you got up.
Anonymous wrote:I rent out our basement and while utilities are included, the thermostat is upstairs and the renter is not to touch. My only obligation is to keep the heat at the legal level, which I think is 65.
That said, 72 is really really warm. Also, the renter could easily have solved the problem by opening a window in their room, which is pretty inefficient for your system, so perhaps you should be happy.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I rent out our basement and while utilities are included, the thermostat is upstairs and the renter is not to touch. My only obligation is to keep the heat at the legal level, which I think is 65.
That said, 72 is really really warm. Also, the renter could easily have solved the problem by opening a window in their room, which is pretty inefficient for your system, so perhaps you should be happy.
65° is too cold at night it should be a minimum of 68°, particularly as your renter is in basement . Heat rises and basements can get cold