Does your home have a roof? How about windows? Are all the doors open.
The thermostat in your house is a good analogy for the way your body regulates its temperature. It always tries to stay at 98. 6 degrees Fahrenheit and cools or warms itself based on outside forces.
It is used to figure ot the temperature in your house or outside
It all depends on the size of the house, how well it is insulated, the outside temperature, and the inside temperature. For most houses about 20 kW should be enough (say 75,000 BTU/hour)
your house
On the vents closest to the main unit it should read around the same temperature that the thermostat is set to after its been running and then as the venting increases the temperature should be less, between 2 to 10 degrees different depending on how well the ducting is in the attic........
It is 31 degrees higher.
About 40%
It probly means its -3 degrees Fahrenheit, which is the temperature of the air outside your house in the area around your thermometer. may be different depending on how close your thermometer is to your house.
That depends on the ambient temperature. A corpse will take on the temperature of the environment. If it's in a house that is 70 degrees, the corpse will cool to 70 degrees. If it's outside at 40 below, it will cool to 40 below.
By having the air conditioning set at 75, that means the air conditioner will come on only if the temperature in the house rises above 75. It will maintain the interior temperature at a temperature of not more than 75. If the outside air temperature is lower than 75 and you want the interior temperature to stay at 75, you will need to turn on the furnace and set it at 75. Now the furance will come on if the temperature in the house drops below 75 but will not come on if the temperature in the house rises above 75.
It should be at least 40 degrees air from the outlets. The house temp will be ten to fifteen degrees lower inside than the outside. The inside temp depends on all the insulation features of your home.
If the house temperature inside is greater than the temperature outside the house, then yes. If the temperature outside the home is greater than the temperature inside of the home, then no.
The temperature in the house is that of the temperature outside
74 degrees in the vehicle................ 79 degrees in the house................
The thermostat in your house is a good analogy for the way your body regulates its temperature. It always tries to stay at 98. 6 degrees Fahrenheit and cools or warms itself based on outside forces.
A heat pump generally has a max temperature change of 20 degrees F. If air entering the return duct is 90, it will not be cooler than 70 on the discharge side, Below 60, it is working against the insulation and air infiltration into the house. It is an air conditioner, not a deep freeze. Remember that a heat pump either dumps heat outside to cool a house, or picks up heat from outside to heat the house. If it is 100 degrees outside, it is hard to dump heat. Below 35, it is hard to pick up heat. At an outside temp of 59 degrees, it should work for either- but nobody needs cooling when it is 59 degrees outside. Open a window, already!.
57 degrees