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Pete C. Pete C. is offline
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Default Turn thermostat down?


Ignoramus10802 wrote:

On 2009-10-29, Pete C. wrote:

Ignoramus10802 wrote:

On 2009-10-29, Stormin Mormon wrote:
Please forgive me while I troll for a moment.....

Is it energy saving to turn the thermostat down, when
leaving the house? I mean, the furnace has to run to catch
up when I get home. I have a way of looking at the matter.
I'll explain my point of view after the argument is
underway.


Imagine for a minute that you have to leave house for a month.

Would it be energy efficient to turn thermostat down? Of course, as
less heat will be produced for a whole month, with only a few minutes
to catch up.

The same applies to only one day.

i


It's far more complicated than that. Factors such as insulation / heat
loss, type of heating, multi-stage heating, electric backup heat on heat
pumps, etc. all come into play in determining the away duration and temp
reduction where savings begin, and in some cases (typically high
efficiency homes) it can require a multi day absence to see any savings.


This is patently untrue.

i


No, it isn't. It was documented on a well monitored high efficiency
model home where the backup heat strips on the high efficiency heat pump
were kicking in in order to provide a reasonable temp recovery time
since the heat pump itself did not have the capacity. The electricity
used during the temp recovery was more than would have been used on temp
maintenance due to the switch to lower efficiency backup (100% vs.
300%+).