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Day time, night time, home and not home?

Mostly I'm asking about Furnaces, but I'm interested in info from anyone that heats a home and uses a thermostat.

2006-10-26 07:21:40 · 15 answers · asked by babyitsyou31 5 in Home & Garden Other - Home & Garden

15 answers

RIGHT NOW I KEEP IT AT 65 WHEN IM HOME OR NOT HOME DURING THE DAY AT NIGHT I TURN IT UP TO 68.......WHEN IT STARTS TO SNOW AND GET COLDER THEN ILL PROBLY TURN IT TO NO HIGHER THAN 72......GAS GETS EXPENSIVE BUT ITS SUPPOSE TO BE BETTER THIS YR THAN LAST...BUT WE WILL SEE.......IM IN MISSOURI......IT COULD BE DIFFERENT IN OTHER STATES....

2006-10-26 07:27:59 · answer #1 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

You pose an exciting question that purely an heating professional ought to probable answer, with connection with the gas utilization as against settings on thermostat. I merely be attentive to that the decrease the thermostat putting, the less gas you will use whilst in comparison with a a strategies better putting. regardless of each and every thing, you're elevating the temperature on your place, and to maintain it at that temp putting, you will possibly need an prolonged run time on your furnace. for sure, the less the furnace runs the less gas it makes use of. So your question approximately it being 50 exterior as against 20 exterior is the crux. To reiterate, the less warm that's, the greater your heater is going to come again on and run to maintain regardless of putting you place on the thermostat. in case you attempt to decrease your fees, you ought to look to combating warmth loss via sealing homestead windows and different air leak openings, including some insulation if conceivable, something to maintain what warmth you get out of your furnace. one thank you to objective to save some dollars is get a decrease priced fan and tilt it on the ceiling in case you do not have ceiling followers. which will stress the hotter air on the desirable of the room down in the direction of the cooler air on the floor point.

2016-11-25 21:58:10 · answer #2 · answered by ? 4 · 0 0

We bought an old Victorian to remodel and had a huge surprise our first cold month. We had to keep the heat down to 58F last winter so we would only have $200-$300 gas bills. This year we have torn out walls and insulated. We are staying good at 63F. No higher!! We haven't insulated all the walls yet. I think reasonable for most people is between 68F and 72F.

2006-10-26 08:22:28 · answer #3 · answered by carrie p 3 · 0 0

I keep my external thermostat on 70' in the winter and pn 76' in the summer. I live alone in an apartment and am very cold natured.

2006-10-26 07:35:26 · answer #4 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

We all get nosebleeds when the house is hot so we keep our thermostat set at 65 except for early mornings when we wake up when I bump it up to 70 just so everyone will get out of bed..lol

2006-10-26 07:30:37 · answer #5 · answered by jawja_punkinpie 2 · 0 0

68

2006-10-26 07:31:27 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 0

18 *C when home, 16 *C when not home, 17 *C at night. It's sometimes a little on the chilly side but it saves a lot of money

2006-10-26 07:33:04 · answer #7 · answered by kej 2 · 0 0

or 65 F

2006-10-26 07:23:49 · answer #8 · answered by LatterDaySaint and loving it 6 · 0 0

68 degrees farenheit. If it is a really cold wind chill factor then sometimes up to 72 degrees.

2006-10-26 07:23:52 · answer #9 · answered by bandaid 2 · 0 0

I keep mine at 21-22°C usually at all times

2006-10-26 07:32:32 · answer #10 · answered by moglie 6 · 0 0

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