|
||||||
| General Discussion Please read our Forum Rules before posting Feel free to talk about anything and everything about money. |
![]() |
|
|
LinkBack | Thread Tools |
|
||||
|
A couple of comments come to mind. When I was single in my last apartment, I would be out most of the day and keep the heat just about off. I would turn it up to maybe 66 or 67 when I got home. At night, I would turn it back down but I would run a small space heater in the bedroom. Why bother heating the whole apartment? That kept my bills really low.
In my first apartment, I lived on the ground floor. My apartment faced a courtyard so although there was a window, it didn't get the wind exposure that an outside apartment would. Also, my apartment was over the boiler room for the building and the heat radiated up into my apartment. The floor was actually warm to touch to the point that I couldn't store certain items directly on the floor. I lived there for 2 years and never once turned on the heat. My cousin, who is single, lives on the second floor of a duplex that he owns. For many years, he had an elderly woman living on the first floor. She kept her heat on 85 day and night. Thanks to heat rising, he hardly ever needed his heat. I can't imagine what her bills were like but it sure helped his bills.
__________________
Steve * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular. * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything? * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going. |
|
|||
|
I'm from Iowa as well. We have a thermostat that is set to switch a couple of times throughout the day. During the day when were at work it is set to 62, we come home and in the evening it goes up to 68, while sleeping it goes to 65, and the cycle repeats itself...pretty nice!
|
|
|||
|
We're in WI. 68 during the day, and I think 62 at night. When I get home from work, I put on a sweatshirt.
DW, who is more sensitive to the lower temp, doesn't like it, but she understands. |
|
|||
|
Our programable thermostat is great! We live in Upstate NY, so winter schedule: 68 at about 5:45am, while we getting ready for the day, drops to 62 about 9am, then back up to 68 at 3:30pm and then drops to 56 after 10:30pm.
Summer, only slight variations between 68 & 74. |
|
|||
|
From November to about the end of April it kicks on at 6 a.m. to 70 for an hour to warm up the house and then it is on 60 during the rest of the day, but the temp in the house usually registers around 65 because it is well-insulated. I am usually home alone during the day. I dress in a sweatshirt, thick jeans, and heavy slipper socks and I'll use a blanket if I am sitting on the couch and get chilly. But at night, we keep it at 68 because at 60 the kids are too cold to sleep and it is too hard to warm the house up the next day.
I have a space heater in my bedroom that I actually keep at 70 at night which is simply because I have a quirk that I can't sleep if my nose is cold and it gets cold at anything less than 70. Layers and blankets don't help with that and I can't sleep with my head under a blanket, I've tried, so...it's weird but it works for us. We turn the furnace (and heater) off completely May through the end of October as it is warm enough from the day's sun to keep the house warm all night at that point, so no space heater then either. No air conditioning in this house. |
|
||||
|
I use to always keep my heat set at 63. My small poodle had surgery this winter, so I have turned the heat up to 64 degrees and she sleeps on a covered heating pad. I have still spend $2500 on propane this winter. (We have a big house, plus we heat the garage and garage eff. apt.)
|
|
||||
|
__________________
Steve * Despite the high cost of living, it remains very popular. * Why should I pay for my daughter's education when she already knows everything? * There are no shortcuts to anywhere worth going. |
|
|||
|
Wow. I live in IL, we keeps ours on 71 during the winter and 73 during the summer at all times, even when we go to bed. My wife will kill me if I change the temp setting. Our average bill during the winter is 250 and 150 during the summer.
|
|
|||
|
It seems like one can save quite a bit of $$$ with a change in thermostat of just a couple of degrees? Is this true? If so, I see another way I can maybe capture extra cashflow of $20 or so per month!
|
![]() |
| Currently Active Users Viewing This Thread: 1 (0 members and 1 guests) | |
| Thread Tools | |
|
|