The Truth About Your AC Can Help You Save $$$
You’d be surprised to find out how many air conditioning myths are floating around. Misinformation about home cooling can cost homeowners in wasted energy, money, efficiency and comfort (the same goes for heating myths).
Separate Facts from Fiction: Ceiling Fans
Myth: Ceiling fans lower the temperature in interior spaces.
Fact: A ceiling fan can be operating at full speed all day but it’s not going to change the temperature in a room by even one degree. Instead, ceiling fans create a cooling effect (aka wind-chill effect) that makes the air seem cooler for anybody who’s in the path of the moving air.
This allows you to raise the temperature setting on the thermostat by three or four degrees without sacrificing comfort. You’ll save on energy when the AC isn’t working so hard (or during mild weather, when it isn’t running at all).
Myth: Leaving a ceiling fan running in an empty room helps to cool the house.
Fact: Unless the fan is moving air from one area or room to another, creating circulation, the only thing it’s accomplishing by being left on is wasting energy. A fan’s cooling effects are instantaneous, rather than cumulative. Treat ceiling fans like lights: turn them off when you’re the last one leaving the room.
Do You Know Your AC Myths from Facts?
Myth: For better cooling, get a bigger air conditioner.
Fact: Over-sizing an AC system can be just as bad as under-sizing it. For the most efficient and effective home cooling, an air conditioner should be sized to match the cooling load of your home. One that’s too big will
- short cycle (run in frequent short bursts), which wastes energy (the most energy is expended when the blower initially kicks on),
- deliver uneven cooling and
- stress the equipment.
Meanwhile, an undersized air conditioner will struggle to adequately cool your home.
A competent and qualified HVAC company in Cincinnati (or wherever you happen to live) will conduct a cooling-load calculation before they recommend a new AC for your home. Consult an experienced and reputable AC installation company for a recommendation you can trust.
Myth: You can obtain quicker cooling in a hot house by setting the thermostat much lower than you really need.
Fact: Your AC isn’t going to arrive at the desired temperature any quicker this way, and setting an unnaturally low thermostat temperature could damage your equipment, especially if you forget you set it that low and don’t change it back.
This is particularly hazardous during excessively warm weather. Most AC systems aren’t designed to bridge the difference between 95 and 62 degrees for an extended period, and you’ll end up with a broken AC system if you allow that to happen.
Which Other AC Truths Do You Already Know?
Myth: Your air conditioner’s only function is home cooling.
Fact: In addition to cooling, a properly operating air conditioner should remove moisture from interior air, making the home feel more comfortable, eliminating condensation on cooled surfaces and reducing the spread of mold and mildew. If your AC isn’t reducing humidity, you should get it checked by a reputable HVAC professional.
Myth: Leaving your AC running all day in an empty house will save more energy than turning it off in the morning and then turning it back on when you get home.
Fact: Unless you have a reason for maintaining a moderately cool home when you’re away all day (such as pets that are home all day), turn off the AC on mildly warm days – or on hotter days, leave it on, but with the temperature setting turned up several degrees – before you leave and then adjust the setting when you get home.
For an even better result, a programmable thermostat will allow you to set temperature changes ahead of time, so the house is comfortably cool when you’re expected to return, but you aren’t wasting energy cooling an empty house all day long.
