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Vic Smith Vic Smith is offline
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Default Normal A/C on / off cycle durations?

On Sun, 17 Sep 2017 09:24:25 -0700 (PDT), wrote:

The question was about short cycling and how he could determine if his was short cycling. Most of the posts here were about what temp is comfortable and other useless information. I love the "wrong again" comment. That was also helpful especially without a reason. I'm pretty sure my one year old, 7K, 2.5 ton system is too big for my 720 square foot house. I had the compressor and outdoor components exchanged for 2 ton components within two weeks. The humidity is always in the upper fifties so it never feels good. Another sign it's too big. Not surprisingly, the blower motor went out at 12 months. I was lead to believe it was a manufacturing problem. Doesn't take a genious to figure out a system turning off and on too often will also cause wear and tear. Which leads us back to the original question....how short is too short? It was hot here in Chicago yesterday, 85, and my newly repaired A/C was on 7 minutes and off 7 minutes which I felt was too short. Still at a loss given the info
here. It was hot, am I wrong in thinking it was too short? BTW, I realize insulation, window and door leaks must factor in. Four years ago I had 8 inches of insulation blown the attic. My old two ton A/C never had such short cycles, not even with 4 inches of insulation. I understand on a hot day 10 minutes on and 10 minutes off or three cycles an hour could be appropriate from info I got elsewhere. Anyone agree? Comments? I can't replace worn out parts every year.


I live in your area, FWIW. Cycling has a lot to do with your thermostat's "anticipator."
I think I have mine maxed to avoid excessive cycling.
Thermostat placement is also important, as is air circulation in your home.
Unless it's in the 90's, mine cycles only enough to reach the temp the thermostat is set
to. That doesn't mean it's the same temp everywhere in the house, just the hallway where
the thermostat is mounted on the wall.
It's important to have good air circulation to avoid hot spots. I have ceiling fans.
I'll try to remember to time the cycling for you today. We should be close to the same
temp.