- Joined
- Apr 30, 2005
- Messages
- 34,377
OUCH! 


Been in this house 25 years; this may be the hottest day I've seen.
I like to do my bit to fight climate change.

Here is what my thermometers show, even though we don't have AC:
You ask, how can your house be 22 deg cooler than outside?
Our 100 year old house is mostly original.
All walls and ceilings are that old fashioned lath and plaster.
It weighs a ton compared to modern drywall, but it insulates really well!
All windows are original single-pane so no insulation there.
We've never had AC, or felt we really needed it.
Sure, there are maybe 10 or 20 days a year AC would be nice to have, but I know I'd get spoiled and use it all the time.
I do a couple other things.
During summer all the windows that get direct sun get a very cheap but effective treatment.
Home Depot sells big 8' x 4' x 1/2" sheets of insulation for $10.
Here's one cut down.

It's Tyvek Styrofoam with one side covered in a reflective mylar silver mirror-like film.
I custom cut them to fit tightly inside the window frames that receive direct sun.
Also I monitor indoor and outdoor temps.
Twice a day (when temps are the same) we open or close windows to cool the house in the summer and warm the house in the winter.
Of course in the winter we welcome into the house maximum solar energy.
It ain't pretty, but it's very cheap and very green (zero electricity draw), and it's not really that much trouble.



Been in this house 25 years; this may be the hottest day I've seen.
I like to do my bit to fight climate change.

Here is what my thermometers show, even though we don't have AC:

You ask, how can your house be 22 deg cooler than outside?
Our 100 year old house is mostly original.
All walls and ceilings are that old fashioned lath and plaster.
It weighs a ton compared to modern drywall, but it insulates really well!
All windows are original single-pane so no insulation there.
We've never had AC, or felt we really needed it.
Sure, there are maybe 10 or 20 days a year AC would be nice to have, but I know I'd get spoiled and use it all the time.
I do a couple other things.
During summer all the windows that get direct sun get a very cheap but effective treatment.
Home Depot sells big 8' x 4' x 1/2" sheets of insulation for $10.
Here's one cut down.

It's Tyvek Styrofoam with one side covered in a reflective mylar silver mirror-like film.
I custom cut them to fit tightly inside the window frames that receive direct sun.
Also I monitor indoor and outdoor temps.
Twice a day (when temps are the same) we open or close windows to cool the house in the summer and warm the house in the winter.
Of course in the winter we welcome into the house maximum solar energy.
It ain't pretty, but it's very cheap and very green (zero electricity draw), and it's not really that much trouble.
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