This Heat and Your Air Conditioning

What type of AC unit do you have?

  • Window unit

    Votes: 4 11.1%
  • Wall unit

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • Central

    Votes: 26 72.2%
  • Other

    Votes: 6 16.7%
  • No AC

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • I have AC but never use it

    Votes: 1 2.8%

  • Total voters
    36
Central air. We also use our ceiling fans all year to stir the air around as well, one in the bedroom & the living room. Fans are clockwise turning in summer & counter clockwise for winter. We also have several tower fans that are in reserve if we need them.
 
Two central A/C units... one for upstairs and one for downstairs. Upstairs is set at 78, and since heat rises to the top it is always going. Downstairs set at 77 and is rarely on until late in the day. Ceiling fans everywhere, always on. I'm a wimp when it comes to heat. We reach the 100s in August and only drop into the 80s at night.
 
Just had a flashback to when I was a kid. Step father read that the best way to deal with heat was to allow a fan to suck the air out of the house. He set a floor fan in front of the screen door. Honestly, it did sweet nothing. At night, he’d push the little lock on the screen door so everything was safe. Have to wonder about his lack of common sense.
I used this method when I was kid sleeping in basically a hot attic. The fan, a box fan, needs to be set if front of a window exhausting the hot air. Another window needs to be open so that a draught is created btwn the 2 so cool night air is drawn in to replace the hot exhausted air.

Putting the fan in front of a door obviously didn't work, since the cool air just got pushed back outside as quick as it came in.

I use the same system in my truck camper which has two roof mounted fans. One on exhaust pulling air out and the other on intake, replacing the hot air w cooler air.
 
I don't have A/C but my house was built in the 1920s. I have roof insulation the government paid for so it is OK in summer but if it gets too hot I take a book to the shopping mall and sit in their armchairs and enjoy their A/C (its only a 150 metres away).

The downside of the roof insulation is that in winter the house doesn't heat up when the sun hits the tin roof like it used to so I have to use my fan heater a few times on really cold days. This has been very cold start to winter one night it got down to nearly freezing but daytime is usually in the mid/high teens or low 20s so not too bad, lovely out in the garden in the sun.
 
I took my window AC unit out recently. I just had it in for a few days during the heat wave and used it about two hours a day, the hottest parts of the day. A fan is okay with me.
 

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