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Tim A
  • Tim A
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
04 May 2022 13:54:19

What temperature are people's houses at the moment and do you still have the heating on?


 


My thermostat used to be set at 20c, but have been trying to get away with 17-18c , the last few weeks. 


This still requires the heating on a couple of times a day at the moment. Spent £6.80 on gas this month which includes a bit for hot water through the Combi boiler. 


 


Currently 17.8c in the house.  Seems to sustain at this temperature around the middle of the day with a couple of people around the house,  no heating and outside temps of 11-15c, just the evenings and mornings that heating is required at present.  With any luck some warmer weather in the next few days will reduce gas usage further. 


 


 


 


 


Tim
NW Leeds
187m asl

 My PWS 
Hungry Tiger
04 May 2022 14:14:15


What temperature are people's houses at the moment and do you still have the heating on?


 


My thermostat used to be set at 20c, but have been trying to get away with 17-18c , the last few weeks. 


This still requires the heating on a couple of times a day at the moment. Spent £6.80 on gas this month which includes a bit for hot water through the Combi boiler. 


 


Currently 17.8c in the house.  Seems to sustain at this temperature around the middle of the day with a couple of people around the house,  no heating and outside temps of 11-15c, just the evenings and mornings that heating is required at present.  With any luck some warmer weather in the next few days will reduce gas usage further. 


 


 


 


 


Originally Posted by: Tim A 


Still got aga on a low setting - to give background heat. My house is very old solid walls no cavity etc. So it gets cold easily.


Would love to put heating off totally - but my elderly mother feels the cold even worse than I do.


Waiting for the warmer weather to kick in.


 


Gavin S. FRmetS.
TWO Moderator.
Contact the TWO team - [email protected]
South Cambridgeshire. 93 metres or 302.25 feet ASL.


JOHN NI
04 May 2022 14:37:05

About 18C by day indoors - which is tolerable when the sun is shining on the back of the house.
Morning boost of about 45 minutes and evenings still require about 50 minutes of heat just to take the chill off. In total though - now down to less than two hours per day for heat. Hoping to switch to hot water only mode from next week which would cut the 'on' to 45 minutes.


John.
The orange County of Armagh.
ARTzeman
04 May 2022 15:24:02

22.0c. Sun shines through the lounge windows. Always stops the heating coming on for the rest of the bungalow.






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Others just get wet.
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Jiries
04 May 2022 20:33:01

Around 17-18C which is well below for April and May so far which normally should be in low 20's by now without heating.  I went to my neigbhour house who living room is very warm due to conservatory facing south which our garden faces south.  He used it to warm the house so I am thinking to install it next year as the conservatory can reach over 25C even in cloudy weather to over 40C so will see how it goes.  If reach 25c that will give our open plan living room boost to 22-23C, and at 30-35C will be 26-28C and during heatwaves when it over 40C will give indoor well over 30C but will not let it happen as will open windows and doors during 30C outside days.  Hope that will reduce the gas heating a lot more next year of conservatory can do the job.  You can notice the car is very warm even if 12C and cloudy outside so same thing to it.  I notice if you use heating for 1 hour or 2 hours it shot up to £3.  

Tim A
  • Tim A
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
04 May 2022 21:11:08


Around 17-18C which is well below for April and May so far which normally should be in low 20's by now without heating.  I went to my neigbhour house who living room is very warm due to conservatory facing south which our garden faces south.  He used it to warm the house so I am thinking to install it next year as the conservatory can reach over 25C even in cloudy weather to over 40C so will see how it goes.  If reach 25c that will give our open plan living room boost to 22-23C, and at 30-35C will be 26-28C and during heatwaves when it over 40C will give indoor well over 30C but will not let it happen as will open windows and doors during 30C outside days.  Hope that will reduce the gas heating a lot more next year of conservatory can do the job.  You can notice the car is very warm even if 12C and cloudy outside so same thing to it.  I notice if you use heating for 1 hour or 2 hours it shot up to £3.  


Originally Posted by: Jiries 


Surely in the winter a conservatory will cool down the rest of the house unless you plan to have insulated doors to it which you keep shut?  


Didn't you also move from the SE to Midlands, so you will be hearing the house by more than you used to? 


Tim
NW Leeds
187m asl

 My PWS 
Tim A
  • Tim A
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
04 May 2022 21:14:03
I was speaking to someone from Brisbane and they were adamant they needed heating in their house in winter. Looking at average temps, seems the coldest months are Max22c/Min10c, so not sure why there would be the need for heating, the same as a Southern England summer. Maybe the houses are poorly insulated.
Tim
NW Leeds
187m asl

 My PWS 
DEW
  • DEW
  • Advanced Member
05 May 2022 06:18:22


 


Surely in the winter a conservatory will cool down the rest of the house unless you plan to have insulated doors to it which you keep shut?  


Didn't you also move from the SE to Midlands, so you will be hearing the house by more than you used to? 


Originally Posted by: Tim A 


My experience with a south facing conservatory is that on sunny days in winter it will add some heat to the house if you leave the internal door open, not a lot if it's frosty outside, but on cloudy days it's definitely best to keep that door shut. 


In summer you have the opposite problem if you have plants in the conservatory; it gets too hot if you don't leave the external door open, and even with blinds there is a problem in really hot sunny weather.


War does not determine who is right, only who is left - Bertrand Russell

Chichester 12m asl
Essan
05 May 2022 12:02:53

Not had any heating on since March.    May come on again in November ....


Andy
Evesham, Worcs, Albion - 35m asl
Weather & Earth Science News 

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Hungry Tiger
05 May 2022 13:45:33


Not had any heating on since March.    May come on again in November ....


Originally Posted by: Essan 


You're lucky or either very tough.


Having just seen some of the forecasts -  looks like I can finally put my aga off totally tomorrow.



Gavin S. FRmetS.
TWO Moderator.
Contact the TWO team - [email protected]
South Cambridgeshire. 93 metres or 302.25 feet ASL.


Hippydave
05 May 2022 14:53:17

We've been wobbling around 16-17c in the mornings and 18-19c peak temp mid afternoon. Heating has been off for weeks now although I have got the woodburner going for a couple of hours on 2-3 occasions just to raise temps a bit when they've stayed a bit too low. Main thing here is sunshine amounts - if it's sunny for a few hours the house is fine, persistent cloudy and cool weather and it can be a bit cold when I'm working from home and not moving about much. We're sort of East facing at the back and West at the front so not the warmest house, which TBH I prefer as helps a bit with the summer heat.


Longer term outlook suggests I'll be needing to try and cool the house rather than warm it from here on in. I imagine that'll be the case now until mid to late October


Home: Tunbridge Wells
Work: Tonbridge
Hungry Tiger
06 May 2022 13:38:53

Just turned off my heating completely today.


 



Gavin S. FRmetS.
TWO Moderator.
Contact the TWO team - [email protected]
South Cambridgeshire. 93 metres or 302.25 feet ASL.


GezM
  • GezM
  • Advanced Member
06 May 2022 15:43:14

It's finally a comfortable temperature for desk working in our dining room. I'm usually in the loft but my wife has commandeered that room for the moment!


Our house is south west facing at the back but is a narrow terraced house which means that we don't get a huge amount of direct sunlight downstairs, except for the kitchen. Upstairs gets a lot more and so there is a big temperature range in the summer - along with the inevitable heat rising from bottom to top. 


Today, the outside temperature has been high enough to open doors and windows which has pushed downstairs up to 20.5C . These days I find anything below about 19C feels cold after a few hours. Totally different of course at weekends when we tend to be much more active.


Heating is still on in the evening but only set to 20C so hopefully won't kick in tonight and I expect we'll switch it off soon.


 


Living in St Albans, Herts (116m asl)
Working at Luton Airport, Beds (160m asl)
Retron
06 May 2022 15:56:57

28.1C upstairs but a much more pleasant 19.0C downstairs. All windows firmly closed apart from one of the back bedroom windows - as that's where the a/c exhaust hose goes.


24C outside and next to no wind, more like an August day than an early May one.


Leysdown, north Kent
Tim A
  • Tim A
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
06 May 2022 16:44:58
In contrast here, we are down to 17.3c inside and 13.4c outside with rain after a high of 15.6c. Heating not been on since Wednesday but reckon I will have to put it on for a bit when my wife comes home.
Tim
NW Leeds
187m asl

 My PWS 
Jiries
06 May 2022 18:52:08

I was speaking to someone from Brisbane and they were adamant they needed heating in their house in winter. Looking at average temps, seems the coldest months are Max22c/Min10c, so not sure why there would be the need for heating, the same as a Southern England summer. Maybe the houses are poorly insulated.

Originally Posted by: Tim A 


That could be the reason as living in Cyprus in winter was really horror time to live, even if outside Nicosia average is 15-16C inside are the same and sometimes colder than outside.  We had to rely on the sunlight to warm up a bit when open the shutters but get stone cold in the evenings.  We have central heating but never go more than 17C inside, mostly 14-16C and drop to 9C if outside -2C which happened in my bedroom when i got up with breath mist coming out.  My mother saw once drop to 5C in the large living room when outside was -3C and forced them to use the gas cooker on to heat up the kitchen as our heaters was very weak.  

Retron
07 May 2022 03:59:04

That was a warm night!


It's 22C upstairs (the a/c got it down to 20C in the evening in my bedroom, but I turned it off when I went to bed), 18.5C downstairs.


12.7C outside and no wind... just like a summer night, really.


Leysdown, north Kent
ARTzeman
07 May 2022 12:18:35

23.0c on Hallway Barometer. 22c in bedroom thermometer. 


22c. On-wall thermostat. 22.9c on wireless weather forecaster. 






Some people walk in the rain.
Others just get wet.
I Just Blow my horn or trumpet
Spring Sun Winter Dread
07 May 2022 14:55:41
I think I turned mine on maybe once or twice since the start of April and it was off for a big slice of Feb and March aswell. I benefit massively when the sun is shining due to an abundance of South facing windowage plus I've been toughened up by many years living in a cold and poorly insulated flat before finally moving last year. As a result I now actually prefer a slightly cooler house
Retron
07 May 2022 17:46:28

21.4 upstairs and 20.0 exactly downstairs - and that's with a breeze and the windows open all day. Yesterday's warmth took quite a while to ebb away!


Leysdown, north Kent
Retron
17 May 2022 16:55:37

Just under 30C when I got in today... 29.7C to be exact (and it was 25C outside).


It's now 24C outside and 22C inside, with the portable a/c on full pelt. Not cheap, but very much worth it!


Leysdown, north Kent
Tim A
  • Tim A
  • Advanced Member Topic Starter
17 May 2022 17:02:41
Max of 21.5c today outside, a pleasant 20.7c inside. No heating since Friday.
Tim
NW Leeds
187m asl

 My PWS 
Jiries
17 May 2022 19:39:12


Just under 30C when I got in today... 29.7C to be exact (and it was 25C outside).


It's now 24C outside and 22C inside, with the portable a/c on full pelt. Not cheap, but very much worth it!


Originally Posted by: Retron 


I hope to get those warm room temps as today failed to see 23-24C inside as outside was poor and over cast from noon which meant to be sunny and 23-24C max but only 19-20C today. Inside managed to reach 22C and that the highest so far since I moved in which is shocking low for May.  Will change that when I install the conservatory that face south and bring warmth though the open plan living room so hopefully back to temps ranges from 22-32C day and night like I used to see in the 90's and early 00's from April to Oct with heating completely off.  Now days with UK becoming Icelandic climate so having a conservatory will be big help to survive cold summers.  

Gusty
18 May 2022 06:56:38

22.5c in the hallway at the moment (the coolest part of the house where the thermostat lives). The warmest so far this year at this time of day. Yesterday it reached 23.8c.


So nice to have naturally induced warmth in the house rather than from central heating. 


Steve - Folkestone, Kent
Current conditions from my Davis Vantage Vue
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Hungry Tiger
18 May 2022 09:50:36


22.5c in the hallway at the moment (the coolest part of the house where the thermostat lives). The warmest so far this year at this time of day. Yesterday it reached 23.8c.


So nice to have naturally induced warmth in the house rather than from central heating. 


Originally Posted by: Gusty 


Same here Steve.



Gavin S. FRmetS.
TWO Moderator.
Contact the TWO team - [email protected]
South Cambridgeshire. 93 metres or 302.25 feet ASL.


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