Recommended Home Cooling Strategies

If you are looking for a more inexpensive way to cool your home, you are not alone. Within this guide you will find several techniques that will lower your monthly utilities bills by a significant margin. As well, you will be primed to purchase your own home should the need arise.

1. Home Cooling Actions

- Pay attention to your energy meter when everything is shut off in your home. Look for discrepencies - it should read zero
- Install a programmable thermostat
- Clean around windows and doors. Look for any cracks while you are at it
- Turn off the stove when you leave if possile

2. The Design Of Your Home

The costs of living continue to skyrocket, . This is hard to stop entirely due to global warming, but there are many things you can try to lower your monthly bills.

3. Save Money On Home Cooling Systems

You can slash your energy bills by as much as forty percent simply by changing your furnace or central air unit. Seemingly these will work but in actutly they are the most expensive to maintain..

4. Cooling Your Home

In conclusion, the easiest way to save money every month is by cutting back on the things we use as well as lowering or turning off the heat. Further strategies include installig cooling thermostats and more.

5. Evaporation Coolers

In very dry climates, so-called “swamp coolers” are popular for improving comfort during hot weather. The evaporative cooler is a device that draws outside air through a wet pad. The sensible heat of the incoming air, as measured by a dry bulb thermometer, is reduced. The total heat (sensible heat plus latent heat) of the entering air is unchanged. Some of the sensible heat of the entering air is converted to latent heat by the evaporation of water in the wet cooler pads. If the entering air is dry enough, the results can be quite comfortable. These coolers cost less and are mechanically simple to understand and maintain.

An early type of cooler, using ice for a further effect, was patented by John Gorrie of Apalachicola, FL in 1842, who used the device to cool the patients of his malaria hospital.

There is a process called absorptive refrigeration which uses heat to produce cooling. In one instance, a three-stage absorptive cooler first dehumidifies the air with a spray of salt-water or brine. The brine osmotically absorbs water vapor from the air. The second stage sprays water in the air, cooling the air by evaporation. Finally, to control the humidity, the air passes through another brine spray. The brine is reconcentrated by distillation. The system is used in some hospitals because, with filtering, a sufficiently hot regenerative distillation removes airborne organisms.

About the Author:
by: Tim Lapkovski
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