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How to Keep Your Energy Bills Manageable in Summer

Contributor
By Dave Donovan
eHow Contributing Writer
(21 Ratings)
Keep Your Energy Bills Manageable in Summer
Keep Your Energy Bills Manageable in Summer

When hot, humid days set in, you'll want to try and balance the scales between comfort and the cost of that comfort. You'll need to prepare your home. Here are some tips to help keep your energy bills manageable and your home's comfort level in check. They are easy to do and don't take much time at all--and by implementing them into your home's routine maintenance schedule--you will see some dramatic improvements in your energy consumption during the summer months.

Difficulty: Easy
Instructions

    How to Prepare and Manage Your Air Conditioner

  1. Step 1
     

    The bulk of your energy use in the summer comes from your air conditioner. While most of us can't live without it, there are some things you can do to improve its efficiency. For starters, change the air filter. The harder the unit has to work to push air through it, the more electricity it's going to require to cool your home.

  2. Step 2

    Set your thermostat at a reasonable temperature and leave it there. For most people this is around 78 degrees. Keep in mind that for each degree lower you set it, your energy bill increases 4 percent.

  3. Step 3

    If you have a few rooms in which you keep the vents closed, open them up. Keeping them closed will cause your system to be imbalanced, which causes it to work less efficiently.

  4. Step 4

    Check the air conditioner's outside compressor unit if you have central AC. Make sure that there is no debris in or around it and remove any vines that may have gathered on it. Plus, if you live in a sandy area, check the fins to ensure that no sand has collected between them. If there is sand inside, squirt the fins clean with a garden hose.

  5. Step 5

    If you have access to the air conditioner's ductwork, make sure that there are no leaks between the junctions. If you find some, seal them with a quality duct tape.

  6. Step 6

    If you have a window unit, make sure that it is installed flush and that no air is leaking in around its edges.

  7. How to Manage Household Chores

  8. Step 1

    Many of the things you do naturally in your home can also increase the heat buildup inside it. When summer comes around, you may have to change the way you perform some of these chores to help keep your home more comfortable.

  9. Step 2

    Run the dishwasher only at night. Not only will this help reduce the demand on the national grid during the day, but the heat that the unit emits won't have the impact on your sweat glands like it does during the heat of the day.

  10. Step 3

    On the hottest days, cook outside on the grill or plan easy-to-make microwaveable meals. By not using your oven you can save a ton of excess heat from gathering in your home--but if you simply have to use the oven, immediately place a pot of cold water inside of it when you're finished. This will absorb a lot of the heat. Not all of it, but a fair amount. Then you can use the water, now hot, to clean up the kitchen after dinner.

  11. How to Check for Drafts

  12. Step 1
     

    If your home has drafts, imagine your hard-earned money flowing out of them rather than air. You should have already checked for drafts pre-winter, but sometimes we forget. Make sure you do it before summer rolls in.

  13. Step 2

    Check your door for proper weatherstripping. If you can slide a dollar bill between the gaps around your door, then you need weatherstripping pronto or dollar bills will really be flying through the gaps come August.

  14. Step 3

    Check for air leaks around your wall outlets. Pass a wet hand across the area and check for a draft. If you find problems, purchase plate sealers and install them.

  15. Step 4

    Check around all of your windows and exterior doors for drafts using a wet hand or a candle. In areas of poor insulation, seal them up with the proper caulking or weatherstripping product.

Tips & Warnings
  • Planting flowers, shrubs and trees outside your home can help to repel the heat coming off the driveway, sidewalk and other paved areas nearby.
  • Select drapes made of tightly-woven fabrics and keep them closed during the daytime hours to help prevent the heat from coming in. Open them at night when it's cooler outside to allow the heat to escape.
  • Installing solar film on your windows in the summertime can also help reduce the sun's penetrating heat from making your home a sweatbox.

Comments  

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on 8/20/2009 There are so many great ideas here that I've never thought of before! Thanks so much.

cliasays said

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on 8/18/2009 Great thanks for the tips!

velosity said

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on 7/11/2009 Awesome article. I learned alot of stuff here, now I need to go fix my leaks. Thanks for the tips!

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on 7/11/2009 Great article. Many helpful tips. *5

kohuether said

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on 6/25/2009 Great ideas! It's always a shock to see how high the energy bills can be in the summer. And when you're used to the cool indoor climate, it's hard to imagine completely doing without it!

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