Given our collective investment in comfort, the least we can do is to use that energy efficiently. As such, ChooseRenewables has identified 5 things you can do to heat/cool more efficiently. We borrowed a $15,000 thermal imaging camera so we could objectively identify inefficiencies in heating and cooling. We hope to save you the $15k by providing a few simple and readily identifiable indicators. Another option is to hire a professional to perform an energy audit of your home or office...
This post is a bit biased to those of us living in snow country. Fear not snowbirds since the same concepts apply to cooling a home.
1. Fill the cracks
Gaps and cracks in the exterior of a building allow preciously treated air to escape and wasteful warm or cool air to enter a conditioned environment.
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The two small dark marks in the picture indicate gaps. A closer inspection shows a clear gap between both boards. The solution - fill the gap with insulating foam like Great Stuff.
2. Close the gaps
This next one is the most embarrassing. Check out the veritable flood of energy escaping our home in near the walk-out basement.
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3. Weatherstrip the windows and doors
Here's another easy one to fix. Check out the cool blue air entering our house from the garage.
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4. Insulate yourself from evil icicles
Worried about polar ice caps melting? Then you better work your magic to eliminate icicles from forming at your own home. That's right - the best indicator of heating/cooling inefficiency (i.e. cracks, gaps, and poor insulation) is ICICLES!
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5. Close the fireplace flue
This is likely the easiest, and certainly the cheapest, activity that one can perform to eliminate heating/cooling inefficiencies. The thermal image below shows my fireplace with the flue closed and the ambient room temperature set to approximately 68 degrees (using an energy efficient programmable thermostat). The outside temp is approximately 10 degrees. The flue has been closed for at least 24 hours.
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After a short 75 minutes, the surface temperature range had fallen to 51.5 to 64.1 degrees - with an average of 57.8 degrees. So, by simply leaving the fireplace flue open the surface temperature dropped 7.7 degrees (or almost 12%). What a waste...
Here's our advice:
- Inspect your home twice a year for cracks and gaps (once in the Spring to prepare for the cooling season, and once in the Fall to prepare for winter). Pay particularly close attention to adjoining walls/eves and trimwork. Look for any dark spots - and fill the gaps/cracks with sealant/caulking/insulating foam. We've had very good luck with Great Stuff!
- Inspect your doors/windows once a year for adequate weatherstripping. We recommend doing this in the winter so you can actually feel the colder air entering around and under your door.
- Rid yourself of icicles by better insulating your walls and roof. While icicles may be pretty, so are Polar Bears. And your icicles are indicative of your contribution to melting polar ice caps. Poor polar bears...
- Enjoy the fireplace, but close the flue the following morning.