| Heating and Cooling Energy Tips
Heating
and cooling your home uses more energy and drains
more energy dollars than any other system in your
home. Typically, 44% of your utility bill goes
for heating and cooling. No matter what kind of
heating, ventilation and air-conditioning system
you have in your house, you can save money and
increase comfort by properly maintaining and upgrading
your equipment. Remember, though, an energy efficient
furnace or air-conditioner alone will not have
as great an impact on your energy bills as using
the whole house approach. By combining proper
equipment maintenance and upgrades with appropriate
insulation, weatherization and thermostat setting,
you can cut your energy bills in half.
Heating
Tips
-
Set
your thermostat as low as it is comfortable.
-
Clean
or replace filters on furnaces once a month.
-
Clean
warm-air registers, baseboard heaters and
radiators as needed; make sure they're not
blocked by furniture, carpeting or drapes.
-
Use
kitchen, bath and other ventilating fans wisely;
in just one hour, these fans can pull out
a houseful of warmed or cooled air. Turn fans
off as soon as they have done the job.
-
Keep
draperies and shades open on south-facing
windows during the heating season to allow
sunlight to enter your home; close them at
night to reduce the chill you may feel from
>cold windows.
-
Close
an unoccupied room that is isolated from the
rest of the house such as in a corner and
turn down the thermostat or turn off the heating
for that room or zone. Do not, however, turn
the heating off if it adversely affects the
rest of your system.
Heat
Pumps
If
you use electricity to heat your home, consider
installing an energy efficient heat pump system.
Heat pumps are the most efficient form of electric
heating in moderate climates, providing three
times more heating than the equivalent amount
of energy they consume in electricity. There are
three types of heat pumps: air-to-air, water source
and ground source. They collect heat from the
air, water or ground outside your home and concentrate
it for use inside. Heat pumps do double duty as
a central air conditioner. They can also cool
your home by collecting the heat inside your house
and effectively pumping it outside. A heat pump
can trim the amount of electricity you use for
heating as much as 30% to 40%.
Heat Pump Tips
Gas Furnace Tips
-
Using
a programmable thermostat you can adjust the
times you turn on the heating or air-conditioning
according to a pre-set schedule. As a result,
you don't operate the equipment as much when
you are asleep or when the house or part of
the house is not occupied. Programmable thermostats
can store and repeat multiple daily setting
(six or more temperature setting a day) that
you can manually override without affecting
the rest of the daily or weekly program. When
purchasing a new thermostat, look for the
ENERGY STAR label (www.energystar.gov) and
one that allows you to easily use two separate
programs; an "advanced recovery" feature that
can be programmed to reach the desired temperature
at a specific time; and a hold feature that
temporarily overrides the setting without
deleting preset programs.
Air
Conditioners
It might surprise you to know that buying a bigger
room air-conditioning unit won't necessarily make
you feel more comfortable during the hot summer
months. In fact, a room air conditioner that's too
big for the area it is supposed to cool will perform
less efficiently and less effectively than a smaller,
properly sized unit. This is because room units
work better if they run for relatively long periods
of time than if they are continually, switching
off and on. Longer run times allow air conditioners
to maintain a more constant room temperature. Running
longer also allows them to remove a larger amount
of moisture from the air, which lowers humidity
and, more importantly, makes you feel more comfortable.
SEER is the Seasonal Energy Efficiency Rating. SEER
rates the efficiency during the cooling season.
Look for a SEER rating of 13 or above.
Evaporative Coolers
Evaporative coolers may be installed as an alternative
to air conditioning, particularly in climates
with very dry air. Evaporative coolers provide
mechanical cooling to a building by either direct
contact of air with water (direct evaporative
cooler) or a combination of a first-stage heat
exchanger to pre-cool the air and a second stage
with direct air contact with water (indirect/direct
evaporative cooler).
Cooling Tips
-
Whole
house fans help cool your home by pulling
cool air through the house and exhausting
warm air through the attic. They are effective
when operated at night and when the outside
air temperature is cooler than the inside.
-
Set
your thermostat as high as comfortably possible
in the summer. The less difference between
the indoor and outdoor temperatures, the lower
your overall cooling bill will be.
-
Don't
set your thermostat at a colder temperature
setting than normal when you turn on your
air conditioner. It will not cool your home
any faster and could result in excessive cooling
and therefor unnecessary expense.
-
Set
the fan speed on high except in very humid
weather. When it's humid set the fan speed
on low. You'll get better cooling.
-
Consider
ceiling fans to spread the cooled air more
effectively through your home without greatly
increasing your power use.
-
Don't
place lamps or TV sets near your air conditioning
thermostat.
-
Plant
trees or shrubs to shade air-conditioning
units but not to block the airflow. A unit
operating in the shade uses as much as 10%
less electricity than the same one operating
in the sun.
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