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#1 |
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I live in a 2 bedroom apartment that doesn't have central air conditioning. The A/C unit is located in our living room (at point x). My room is located down the hallway. The living room and hallway are cool enough but air doesn't circulate well in my room and the heat from my PC and other electronics in the room can make it much warmer in my room than in the hallway and living room. If I used a fan to try and cool it down in the room would it make more sense to...
1) Put the fan in the hallway blowing into my room so that the cooler air from the hallway is blowing into the room 2) Put the fan in the doorway of my room so that the hot air from my room is blowing out into the hallway 3) Place the fan some way else ![]() |
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#2 |
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#5 |
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95 degrees outside. Get one of these blowing air out of your window, then put a fan in hallway blowing towards your room. Or a cheap window unit. That would likely work out better than trying to use 1 unit in the living room to cool the whole place. Been there back in college. Expect a huge electricity bill. |
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#6 |
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http://www.google.com/products/catal...d=0CJkBEPMCMAA |
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#7 |
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#8 |
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#9 |
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At least being Minnesota, the nights are cool, right? In a month or so it will be 105+ during the day and 85 at night, here. I suffered through a summer of that without AC. The places you will live in college
![]() Just grab a 5000btu window unit (~$100 new) or look to spend less time in your room this summer. Back when, we partitioned off the living room with drapes, and spent as much time as possible there. You can look for some thermal window tint, too. It is cheap enough and will make a considerable difference. |
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#10 |
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#11 |
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Pfft. Dry heat. LP, if it is cooler outside than in your room, blow the fan out the window to vent the heat. If it is cooler inside your room or the temps are about even, just point the fan at yourself imo. |
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#12 |
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I've endured countless NY summers without AC, so I can speak from experience: place the fan as a close as possible to your bed (blowing out). Otherwise, a fan is useless. Go to work, paresseux! |
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#14 |
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from my experience in Iran (hot dry summer) and DC (Humid/hot as hell summer) I found a ceiling fan to be the best option. The air circulates all around you especially in a small room with a ceiling fan. With your shirt off and sheets off the light breeze/air flowing over your back will cool you down real quick. The trick is to sleep on your stomach, hug a pillow with your head sideways, and let the air cool you off. As long as the ceiling fan is running the constant but weak flow of air will continuously cool your back until believe it or not you feel like pulling the sheets on you.
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#15 |
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I tried opening the window and blowing the fan out the window but it seemed like there was more hot air coming in than going out, it was about 90-95 last evening before I went to bed. My landlord has said he'll install an AC unit in the room but I'd rather try and use a fan to save on electricity. I'll give it a shot setting it by the doorway and having it blow outward and see if that helps. It is supposed to be substantially cooler the next couple of days here so that should help too. There is about a 7-10 degree difference between the temperature in the living room and the temperature in my room.
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#16 |
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I tried opening the window and blowing the fan out the window but it seemed like there was more hot air coming in than going out, it was about 90-95 last evening before I went to bed. My landlord has said he'll install an AC unit in the room but I'd rather try and use a fan to save on electricity. I'll give it a shot setting it by the doorway and having it blow outward and see if that helps. It is supposed to be substantially cooler the next couple of days here so that should help too. There is about a 7-10 degree difference between the temperature in the living room and the temperature in my room. ![]() |
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#17 |
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I tried opening the window and blowing the fan out the window but it seemed like there was more hot air coming in than going out, it was about 90-95 last evening before I went to bed. My landlord has said he'll install an AC unit in the room but I'd rather try and use a fan to save on electricity. I'll give it a shot setting it by the doorway and having it blow outward and see if that helps. It is supposed to be substantially cooler the next couple of days here so that should help too. There is about a 7-10 degree difference between the temperature in the living room and the temperature in my room. --- Post Update --- Don't be so cheap. |
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#18 |
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#19 |
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If your room is not being cooled by the AC Unit, the unit is probably not large enough for the space.
People often think that it is an airflow issue, but it is easy to tell if the unit is cycling on and off. If you can hear (or feel) the compressor tripping on and off, blame air flow (I doubt it). But if the compressor is constantly running, it is just undersized. The best way to be comfortable in your room is to put in another air conditioner; it really is not that expensive to operate. Zedd, A/Cs remove energy from the air in a space - this is not always possible to measure by temperature alone. In the north, the air has significantly more enthalpy at a given temperature due to humidity (especially this little heat wave). Point is: you can't just say "20 degrees below outside" since the environments vary so much. For example, your AC works significantly better at 60F than it does at 100F because heat transfer (in this system) is a function of the difference between outside temp and condensor temp. |
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#20 |
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Zedd, The argument you are making is like saying mpg estimates are always wrong for you because you have a lead foot or live in a hilly area. All I am saying is, if it is 100 degrees outside, don't be surprised if the coolest you can get it inside is 80. That is normal. 80 feels quite nice when you are coming from 100. |
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