Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
Talk of The Villages Florida - Rentals, Entertainment & More
#31
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#32
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Interesting topic. When we are away for long periods of time we set the A/C at 81 and forget about it. When we are home we turn the A/C down to 73 before getting ready to go to bed and it stays there until we get up in the morning. When we get up we turn it up to 78. I have no proof to back this up, but I gotta believe that keeping the house at 78 during the hot sunny daylight hours saves money rather than keeping the house at 73 all the time? When we come into the house from being outside, 78 seems nice and cool to us.
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#33
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You said...."When they are off, they use no electricity. The lower you set the temperature, the longer the unit will run, and the more electricity you will use. It is as simple as that. "
Maybe not.......There is a third condition you are ignoring.. An AC can draw 3 times as much current when it is starting then when it is running. So continuously starting and stopping your compressor will result in using significantly more power. Frequetly changing the inside temperature setting will cause the AC to start the compressor and cooling fan many more times then when you leave the AC set at one temperature. If you are using a heat pump, it is even more important not to keep changing the control temperature. A heat pump is slow to recuperate. That is, it has to run a relatively long time to bring the inside temperature to the set temperature. In addition, the back-up aux. heater is frequently a resistive type heater, that uses a lot of electricity. Sort of like blowing air over a toaster. The aux. heater will typically come into play when the outside temperature is below 32 degrees and/or when the inside temperature is set to more then 3 degrees higher then the actual room temperature. If you want to save money, replace your AC/heat pump with a unit that has a staged compressor. It will run as a low BTU unit when the outside temperature is mild and as a larger BTU unit when the outside temperature is extreme. In our area of Florida, my staged heat pump runs as a 1.5 ton unit when the outside temperature is mild and as a 4 ton unit when the temperature is extreme. It typically runs as a 1.5 ton unit 84% of the time. Carrier recently introduced a heat pump that is infinetely varitable. That is, it will run on a wide variety of BTU levels to suit many different outside ambient temperatures. I've been living in Florida for 23 years. I have learned to leave my temperature controller set to 78 degrees in the summer and 72 degrees in the winter, except when I am away for more then 4 or 5 days. When I replaced my single stage heat pump with a two stage heat pump, I saved an average of $65.00 a month on my electric bill over the previous year when I was using a single stage heat pump. |
#34
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You make some good points. Yes, the AC unit uses more power to start, but I don't think more startups would significantly increase your electricity usage because it only takes a few seconds to start the unit, and you pay for electricity by kilowatt hours. I believe that almost all of the AC units in The Villages are single stage units. That is because they are cheaper to buy, and the electricity is relatively cheap. You can save a little money by doing the things mentioned in this thread, but, for most people, it's probably not worth the effort.
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#35
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Has anyone figured out the payback time to cover the cost of a Nest Thermostat? What does it cost?
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#36
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It is not the temperature that causes a mold risk. It is the relative humidity going too high. When we were snowbirds, I had a humidistat installed so when we left for the summer months, we turned the humidistat to the recommended setting (if I recall correctly, it was 60% relative humidity) and set the thermostat to a higher temperature. If the relative humidity got too high, the air-conditioning went on until the relative humidity got down below the set level. The only problem we had was that some of our vitamins (D3 and Fish Oil) ended up sticking together. Other than that, no issues and saved a lot of energy cost.
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#37
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Fred |
#38
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Amazon has several types of Nest thermostats for about $200-$250. Apparently, you can even talk to some of them. I think the payback time would vary wildly, depending on your lifestyle. But, at least you'll have some one to talk to.
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#39
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I love how the energy dept. says ok to raise the temp. when away and lower it to 78 when you want cooling. 78 is cooling???and comfortable! I don't care what you say after that statement. If when up"North" it is ok to lower the t'stat when your away because your heating system can recover much quicker than your cooling system mostly because the heating system has to work on what's called sensible heat while your cooling system has to work on both sensible heat as well as latent heat,which is basically water vapor or humidity. I always leave my t'stat set where I am comfortable unless I am away for several days and the raise it to about 80.
forty years designing, seling and servicing a/c systems in Miami. |
#40
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Really??...what does raising the thermostat a whole 2 degrees save you on electricity..25 cents?
Some people just cant stop “saving” money. |
#41
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#42
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Again I have data from ten thousand reads of my power every second here in TV for years, not a theory. |
#43
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Little too uncomfortable for me. I keep mine on 77 or 78 depending on humidity (raining mot or the day).
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#44
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Since there are interesting disagreements on thermostat settings, let me also throw this out as well.
My 18 month old A/C was leaking and when Munn's came out, the tech told me it was because we keep the temp at 70 degrees, which is too cool and stresses the compressor. This seemed preposterous to me. It turned out that the unit had been installed incorrectly and something inside had been dripping for months, but is there any truth to the claim that setting the temp "too low" is bad for the unit? |
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