How do you have your heating?
How do you have your heating?
Author
Discussion

daimatt

Original Poster:

799 posts

257 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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Just been listening to two of my work friends about how they have their heating on at home. One has it running twice, comes on early in the morning to make sure it's warm when he wakes up then switches off for the time he is at work. It then comes on again at 4 to make sure the house is warm for the evening before switching off at 10ish to go cold over night.

The other friend has it on permanently at the temp he wants (currently 23C) 24 hours a day. He thinks that it works out more efficient to hold the temp than to keep warming a cold house up twice a day. I've not long been in my first house and am used to having it how my old rental agreement stated. So I never set the thermostat lower than 15C and have the heating on all day turning the temp up to 21 when I get home from work, then turn it down again when I wake up.

So fellow PH's, which is the most efficient way to run the heating?

Defcon5

6,459 posts

213 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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I use the thermostat and keep the house at 19 when im in, but turn it down to 15 when I go out.

daimatt

Original Poster:

799 posts

257 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
quotequote all
That sounds pretty much the same as me, thanks for the reply

Matt..

3,917 posts

211 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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My heating is turned off. In the 2yrs i've lived in this flat, i've turned it on only about 4times, and that was a few weeks ago when it was -10c biggrin

macp

4,692 posts

205 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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We have ours coming on around 6.30am then going off about 8am then back on at 4pm until 10.30pm

Always interested in ways of saving a pound or two on the heating bill so will watch this thread with interest.

BoRED S2upid

20,921 posts

262 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
quotequote all
Depends on a few things if you ask me, firstly the efficiency of your thermostat, mine is worse than useless, it has no idea how warm the house is and therefore im in the couple hours in the morning and evening camp.

The cost difference would depend how insulated your house is, how hard is the boiler working inbetween bursts, mine for example is very well insulated and doesn't take much to warm up, my parents built 50 years before mine is like a barn, if your not sitting on the radiator your not warm.

grumbledoak

32,337 posts

255 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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14°C/18°C as cold/hot. Different rooms can have different cold/hot patterns, though most are two periods of hot at the obvious times; the munchkin's usual locations are set for constant hot.

23°C must be costing him a pretty packet...

robinhood21

30,989 posts

254 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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More on the subject Here. and Here.


jaybkay

488 posts

242 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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A warmer house will radiate more heat, hence keeping a house at a constant temperature will cost more to run.

You can reduce heating costs by having a colder house, or by spending money on things like insulation or more efficient heating systems.

ShadownINja

79,213 posts

304 months

Tuesday 26th January 2010
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jaybkay said:
You can reduce heating costs by having a colder house,
hehe You don't say. biggrin

fatboy b

9,662 posts

238 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
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Programmable stat on 16 overnight - 9:30pm to 5am, then up to 18 for the morning - 5am to 10am, then down to 17 for the day - 10am to 3:30pm, then upto 18 for the evening - 3:30pm to 9:30pm. We boost it to 19/20 if we're in, and also have a log-burner in the lounge.

TooLateForAName

4,902 posts

206 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
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I'm astounded at all these people who keep their houses higher than 20c. Our thermostats go between 12 and 18.

ThatPhilBrettGuy

11,810 posts

262 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
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TooLateForAName said:
I'm astounded at all these people who keep their houses higher than 20c. Our thermostats go between 12 and 18.
Yeah, but what the thermostat says and the actual temperature where you usually sit is generally wildly different.

robinhood21

30,989 posts

254 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
quotequote all
TooLateForAName said:
I'm astounded at all these people who keep their houses higher than 20c. Our thermostats go between 12 and 18.
Agree! Keep mine on 24/7 at between 15 & 17. Much better to keep warm by wearing warm clothes and not having to breathe hot stuffy air.

onomatopoeia

3,519 posts

239 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
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Twice a day, 7-7.45 and 4.30-5.45. Might run it some more in the evening if it is cold. No thermostat so the "leave it on all the time" option would turn the house into an oven

sinizter

3,348 posts

208 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
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Twice a day - mostly because the thermostat has been cleverly located in the coldest place in the house and is not really representative of the warmer parts where we actually spend time.

aberdeeneuan

1,410 posts

200 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
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Ours is set to 19 constantly at the moment, mainly for the wee one, with the roving thermostat in the room we are using at any time. So in the day it's in the lounge, at night it's his bedroom. The rest of the radiators are set quite low, just enough to keep chill out of those rooms we don't use.

fido

18,335 posts

277 months

Wednesday 27th January 2010
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14C at night, else i just cope and wear a thick jumper.