Alan L.
Elite Member
For 1000 square feet with 5 windows, and setting the a/c on 78 degrees that seems a little high. We use a lot of electricity ourselves, more than I thought we would. Bottom line I guess is that we set our thermostat on 69-71 most of the time and so its costing us. We have a minisplit in the master bedroom which we set on its minimum setting of 64 at night and turn the rest of downstairs to 74 or 75 when we go to bed.
We have foam insulation in the walls plus 1/2 inch foam insulation applied outside the OSB, and R50 in the ceilings, radiant barrier and ridge vents. We have separate 2-stage Trane 16 SEER units upstairs vs downstairs. We set the upstairs on 76 and it almost never comes on. We cut it down to 70 or so at night when the grandkids spend the night.
Our family room is 22 by 20 and the ceiling is 20 feet tall and there is an open loft. Hot water is propane. Total square footage about 2200. The house has about 20 windows, lots of windows on both front and back of the family room. They are wood, Marvin ultimate double pane Low-E with argon. We have an Anderson french door with low E glass also. Quite a bit of windows, which we leave uncovered most of the time, but all but 2 are under porches.
Ours was more than 3400 kwh last month, the highest it has ever been since we moved into the house. The bill actually covered about 34 days, and it was very hot during that time period. First time it ever broke $400 since we moved in 2 years ago.
I think even in a well insulated house it takes considerable cooling to drop it to 70 from 75, that is our problem, but 70 feels alot better to me.
If I set it on 78 it would have to be really hot for it to run hardly at all I think.
Both of our children had braces. I think the oldest was in college when we finished paying them off, REAL slow. She has beautiful teeth now, and is fixing to have to pay for my grandchilden's braces now.
We have foam insulation in the walls plus 1/2 inch foam insulation applied outside the OSB, and R50 in the ceilings, radiant barrier and ridge vents. We have separate 2-stage Trane 16 SEER units upstairs vs downstairs. We set the upstairs on 76 and it almost never comes on. We cut it down to 70 or so at night when the grandkids spend the night.
Our family room is 22 by 20 and the ceiling is 20 feet tall and there is an open loft. Hot water is propane. Total square footage about 2200. The house has about 20 windows, lots of windows on both front and back of the family room. They are wood, Marvin ultimate double pane Low-E with argon. We have an Anderson french door with low E glass also. Quite a bit of windows, which we leave uncovered most of the time, but all but 2 are under porches.
Ours was more than 3400 kwh last month, the highest it has ever been since we moved into the house. The bill actually covered about 34 days, and it was very hot during that time period. First time it ever broke $400 since we moved in 2 years ago.
I think even in a well insulated house it takes considerable cooling to drop it to 70 from 75, that is our problem, but 70 feels alot better to me.
If I set it on 78 it would have to be really hot for it to run hardly at all I think.
Both of our children had braces. I think the oldest was in college when we finished paying them off, REAL slow. She has beautiful teeth now, and is fixing to have to pay for my grandchilden's braces now.