71 in winter
70 in summer
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71 in winter
70 in summer
Here's January of this year. San Francisco, so pretty moderate weather
typically don't run heat during the day, and low 60s at night (if at all) during the winter. Large temperature gradient throughout house, typically.
South facing windows gives kitchen and living room a greenhouse effect, particularly in the winter, hence the large daily temperature swings:
Usually around 18-19, 15-16 overnight
By thermostat are we talking about heating? I'm cold-tolerant so I typically set mine to 15.5 C. If it gets any colder than that indoors it comes on
23 all year round
It depends on where you sleep. Basement vs upstairs can make a huge difference at the same thermostat setting. I keep mine set to be between 19°C and 25°C and don't have trouble sleeping.
Speaking of which, anyone else use Home Assistant / Z-Wave?
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.
I keep it 68F(20c) downstairs, but the main house temp is regrettably 73F(22C) and I fight to keep it that low because the rest of the house is cold blooded.
I acclimate to to the heat. I've lived in the South with no AC at all; 80F with humidity control is cushy by comparison.
Summer: open windows until heat and/or humidity causes concern for my electronics.
Winter Day: 68F Winter Night: 58F
During the cold season
20°C, 18°C at night and when away
During the warm season
23°C, 25°C when away
Upstate NY - 64°F in the winter, no A/C ( just a half-assed whole house fan).
I knew upstate got cold but not that cold, damn
70 in the winter. And, and we don’t have AC because most days are cool enough in the summer.
Why would I care what temperature it is when I'm sleeping? I'm asleep.
That aside, 60 winter and 73 summer.
80f / 26.6c
63/77 all year.
When I visit the US I find that I usually set it in the mid to high 60s for optimal comfort.
Year long lowest possible to keep whatever fluids are in the radiators flowing. Not off but not too on either. And then open windows to regulate temperature.
My building is hot OK...
18 c - 23 c.
17-20 C
I'm originally from Florida, so 78 is what I usually leave mine at during summer.
It's always set at 19°C at night and 20°C for the day, all year long. But it's only heating, there is no AC.
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.
I agree that 78°F is way too high to be a confortable sleeping temp, though being in a country where residential AC isn't really a thing and inside temps at night often are higher than that in summer... you get used to it, it'll just never be fun.
My ideal sleeping temp is like 15°C but even if I had AC that seems too wasteful so I'd probably settle for 18-20
72°F in summer / 64°F in winter
Heat to 69 in the winter, cool to 74-76 in the summer.
in summer it's off and in winter 20,5-21℃ at daytime and 17℃ at night.
67-68f in the winter, 74 in the summer + fans to supplement when it gets really hot/muggy.
Neither are my ideal temperature, but it lowers the bills and helps reduce the harm done in terms of energy consumption
80 in summer during the day, 75 at night, 78 day and night in winter. We do not have heat, and 78 is required for the air conditioning to run periodically in winter to dehumidify the house.
Florida keys