I’ve been meaning to ask this for a while. I saw a comment a month or so ago. Person said they keep their thermostat at like 65 in the winter and 78 in the summer. 78 seems fucking insane to me. That’s too damn hot for inside. How do you sleep at 78 degrees?

Are they a lizard person or am I a baby?

Edit 1: I love all the comments on this! Never thought this post would create such discussion. Looking at the comments vs upvotes it honestly seems 50/50ish that 78 is hot for the indoors. Can lemmy do polls?

  • @[email protected]
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    133 months ago

    Dry climates will let you set the temp higher in the summer since your body will cool better.

    I have solar/battery and heat pumps so I set my temp to whatever makes my SO happy.

  • tehWrapper
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    103 months ago

    Cheap Canadian here…

    18C in cold months and down to 15C at night.

    Warm months I have central air but don’t turn it on and just live with whatever the temp is.

  • mesa
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    3 months ago

    Short answer:

    • 80 in summer
    • 60 in winter

    Long answer: It gets over 110f so we keep it at 80 in the summer. We have double pane windows, a newer ac as well. Somewhat new insulation. Otherwise the power bill is over 1000 a month. Our bill in the winter is around 100ish and mostly gas. We keep the house at 60.

    PGE is terrible. It’s a little more than 60c a kilowatt now…

    No that’s not a typo on the prices.

    • @[email protected]
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      23 months ago

      Where are you?? I live in an old crappy insulated 4bed house in VEGAS and in the summer I pay like 300-350 for AC that I set and forget at 72°

      • mesa
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        13 months ago

        Whats your kwh rate? Is it 60c or more? Cause thats the main cause. Theres a metric ton of solar being installed last year or so.

        • @[email protected]
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          3 months ago

          60c? You’ve gotta be talking about peak rates in like DTLA, surely?

          You’re telling me your base rate is 60c/kwh?

          NV Energy charges me 10c/kwh

          • mesa
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            13 months ago

            Yep base starts at 60c. Last year it was at 50 but they increased it 4 times since then.

              • mesa
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                33 months ago

                Thanks friend.

                The city itself is thinking of making making its own power company. We are having record number of businesses leave. So its a brutal time. It doesnt help with the whole tarrif situation and parts becoming hard to find (like solar/inverters/etc…).

                • @[email protected]
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                  33 months ago

                  I imagine a lot of residents are leaving too. I figured it was mostly real estate inflation but knowing that about the PG kwh price… that must also be a massive consideration

  • @[email protected]
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    33 months ago

    Not American so we turn the heat on when it’s cold and off when we’ve warmed up enough to save money.

    78 is insane, only a few C off the highest temp ever recorded in my country.

  • @[email protected]
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    23 months ago

    Grew up in a house with no AC in the summer. Would easily hit high 80s inside during the day and hover in the lower 80s or high 70s at night.

    You learn how to deal with it. Use fans to bring cooler air in at night. Close up windows and curtains (especially south-facing blinds) during the day. Hydrate frequently. At night, strip down as far as comfortable, use just a sheet instead of a blanket, and have a fan to circulate air. AC is a relatively new invention, people have been living longer in hotter areas without it. 78 degrees should literally be “no sweat”.

  • @[email protected]
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    23 months ago

    I try to keep between 68 F and 72 F, but uh, the thermostat’s method of measuring the actual temperature in the apartment is completely, laughably busted, so… hot days it goes on 62, cold days it goes on 84.

  • @[email protected]
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    23 months ago

    72 F / 22 C in winter and 68 F / 20 C in summer. We live in a LEED Platinum building and the electric bill for our 2-bedroom apartment never goes above $50, so we set it to whatever is most comfortable.

  • @[email protected]
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    23 months ago

    I live in California’s San Joaquin valley. It gets hot in the summer. PG&E bill is high as hell. Having your place cooler than 78F is a total luxury. In my place keeping it at 78F would mean a couple $600 bills. I have since gotten solar but I’ve heard PG&E increased their prices twice since then. And they want to increase it even more.

    On the other hand some places like Sacramento used to have super cheap rates and people could crank their ACs on.

  • @[email protected]
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    3 months ago

    Yes, 65F for the winter or lower, I hate the heater, and yes, 78F in summer, the heat pump struggles and it’s plenty cool enough, feels cool compared to outside.

    ETA I grew up in Florida without air conditioning. No central air until I was 24, sometimes window units. And at school no air conditioning till 7th grade and they kept it fucking FREEZING in that school so you would be going always from hot outside to so cold inside, it was worse than none.

    People absolutely can adapt to the humidity and heat but buildings do not, they hold up so much better with the central air drying them out.

  • @[email protected]
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    23 months ago

    64/78 year round. Occasionally knock it down to 74 in the summer when it’s going to be really hot and the AC unit may not keep up.The house retains heat too well and bakes in the evening sun.