But completely awesome.
One can say, sure. In northeast, I think it's an overkill.
I can never figure out why Central units are so expensive especially when you see how dirt cheap window units are.
Weird...
But completely awesome.
climate control causes obesity, usually everything we like is bad for us lol.
There is pros and cons to both window units and central. For example, you can't have AC in one room (have to cool each zone).
That's not exactly energy efficient....
Lucky I don't have mine anymore. I have 4 PCs set up in my office (24/7 lan party). And they all get used each and every day (have 3 sons).
![]()
Per inch, sure. But a 12" B&W CRT TV uses a LOT less power than a 60" LCD...and in the past, people would only have the one TV. Try putting your hand above your 50" LCD TV and you'll see that plenty of heat is still being generated...
Also:
- More TVs. One for every room!
- Bigger TVs. Quadruple the screen size and it's going to use more power no matter what you do.
- Plasma TVs. Some people still like them, but they use much more power than any variety of LCD.
And then there's me. See my sig for my reason.
Are we all kinda ignoring the fact that tvs aren't heaters? They are not designed to produce heat and as newer technology has come out the energy produced as waste heat will have reduced by what I can only imagine is a lot. The heat produced by a 60" plasma has no relevance what so ever to the heat produced by a 20 year old TV and neither number can be used to imply which device uses more power.
30 years ago there was one TV on an hour or so a day.
Yeah I have a portable AC unit (all my windows are crank so could not get a window unit) and it's a pain in the butt and uses lot of space. Also had to mod it quite heavily to make it more efficient since it was sucking more hot air in the house than making cold air. :awe: "Portable" is really a joke because this thing is monstrous and by the time I connect all the tubes and stuff, I don't want to move it again for the season.
I definitely want central air at some point. Especially now that our winters are getting shorter and summers are getting longer, it's more worth it. Even for that one week where we get +30's, it pays for itself.
Where is all of this additional load coming from? Lighting, cooking, drying clothes, and AC are easily the biggest demands in any house, and all of them have improved over the years.
As lighting gets more efficient, people use more of it.
http://3.bp.blogspot.com/_otfwl2zc6Qc/S92BXzWM3SI/AAAAAAAANWo/9-zNGAqM3R4/s1600/tv.jpgAre you that young that you think back in the 1980's, which is 30 years ago, that people only owned one TV and ran it for only an hour or two per day?
I think you're trying to channel the 1950's, but even then, while the number of TV's per household wasn't high, they were definitely used more than an hour or two per day. Sheesh......
The additional load comes better efficiency, because efficiency doesn't curb down demand, it raises it. This is known as the Jevons Paradox which states that efficiency in using a resource will result as an increased consumption rather a reduction. This theory has been around for 150 years now and has yet to be proven wrong.
That's why it is laughable that our current administration thinks they can quench our thirst for oil by mandating a fuel economy of 55mpg by 2025.
don't get central, get mini split systems. cool just the room you're in!
as a tangent, iirc a lot of modern housing materials need air conditioning in order not to mold/mildew in the high humidity regions of the south.
Mini splits work too, but they're actually not that cheap either. Couple grand when I had checked. May as well pay a couple grand more and go central. Though mini splits are nice if you only want specific areas cooled, then you save on hydro as I imagine they don't use as much as central air.
exactly. you want it frosty in your bedroom in the middle of summer? you can do that with a mini split system and not cool off the whole rest of your house that you're not in.
i guess you could do it with central with zones maybe?
That was always my theory about why obesity in the south is so high. It would also explain the lazy accent. I would talk lazy too if it was super hot and humid all the time.Meh. Lazy makes for obesity. If it's 95 degrees and humid enough to make me a sweaty mess just walking out to get the mail I'm not doing shit outside. At least I can plop down on the treadmill or exercise bike in my basement and not worry about heatstroke.