
Ratkity wrote:I heard some anecdotal stories about when the fad for lowering your thermostats to save money when it came out in the 70s (before most programmable thermostats of today).
Whether AC or heat, I remember reading that a few degrees lowering saves money, but large temperature differences actually makes a furnace or AC unit work harder. I can't remember if there was a major fuel savings turning down a furnace low or off.
I know you will do your own experiment and hopefully report back!
Hugs,
Ratkity
Ratkity wrote:I heard some anecdotal stories about when the fad for lowering your thermostats to save money when it came out in the 70s (before most programmable thermostats of today).
Whether AC or heat, I remember reading that a few degrees lowering saves money, but large temperature differences actually makes a furnace or AC unit work harder. I can't remember if there was a major fuel savings turning down a furnace low or off.
I know you will do your own experiment and hopefully report back!
Hugs,
Ratkity
mikeschn wrote:Do you have a thermostat on that furnace. I seem to remember that you do. If so, why not let the temp drop to 68 degrees overnight?
Mike...
eamarquardt wrote:Ratkity wrote:I heard some anecdotal stories about when the fad for lowering your thermostats to save money when it came out in the 70s (before most programmable thermostats of today).
Whether AC or heat, I remember reading that a few degrees lowering saves money, but large temperature differences actually makes a furnace or AC unit work harder. I can't remember if there was a major fuel savings turning down a furnace low or off.
I know you will do your own experiment and hopefully report back!
Hugs,
Ratkity
I don't see how a furnace will work "harder" to heat a colder room. It will just work longer. With A/C all the "work" is done outside in the compressor/condenser unit. How hard the unit works is more a function of the outside temperature than how cold (within reason) you are trying to cool the room. Turning a heater/AC unit off will always result in a savings of energy. The energy required to reheat/re cool will be less than sustaining even a more modest thermostat setting over time.
The real question is how comfortable do you want to be and how much are you willing to spend to be comfortable. I think that a programmable thermostat would be a good investment both cost wise and comfort wise.
Cheers,
Gus
southpennrailroad wrote:mikeschn wrote:Do you have a thermostat on that furnace. I seem to remember that you do. If so, why not let the temp drop to 68 degrees overnight?
Mike...
earmark>: "I don't see how a furnace will work "harder" to heat a colder room. "
Yep! it worked longer, not harder. caught that huh!
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Mike I had to buy a digital and it works well. I just decided to just shut it off instead of let it go to a lower temp. Won't do that any longer. It is nice to wake up to a sightly cool/warm room. Not cold like I was this morning.
doitright wrote:southpennrailroad wrote:mikeschn wrote:Do you have a thermostat on that furnace. I seem to remember that you do. If so, why not let the temp drop to 68 degrees overnight?
Mike...
earmark>: "I don't see how a furnace will work "harder" to heat a colder room. "
Yep! it worked longer, not harder. caught that huh!
![]()
Mike I had to buy a digital and it works well. I just decided to just shut it off instead of let it go to a lower temp. Won't do that any longer. It is nice to wake up to a sightly cool/warm room. Not cold like I was this morning.
You have a 19,000 btu heater dose it short cycle? It will heat up the space fast but would a 12.000 btu heater work better? We all over do it and same goes with heat . My 3,000 btu heater works just fine in my 6` X 12` scotty rear door. But that is running it all the time dose not have a thermostat. Just set the thermostat to low and not off.
doitright
mikeschn wrote:Winter in PA... ah yes, I remember it well!
Damn cold at times!!!![]()
Hmmm... we need more insulation!!!
How about you climb into your C.T., then we shoot some liquid insulation in there. You'll have to flap your arms around everywhere you don't want the insulation to set up. You've only got a couple minutes. Kinda like moving bubbles around in a bubble bath!!!
Ah well, stay warm!
Mike...
P.S. Did you get the insulation in that you were talking about in the spring?
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