Is it possible my electric bill is this high?

Understanding your A/C system

Understanding your A/C system

Here is a couple of things to know about your A/C system.

1st --- If your system was sized properly and installed correctly, then the following will apply.

Furnace and Air Conditioning systems are sized based on heat loss/ heat gain calculations of a given dwelling. Not to bore you with all the tech stuff of how one house can be different from another, A/C systems are all sized here in the St. Louis area for a 95 degree ambient air temp. This means that if it is 95 or hotter, in theory, your A/C system should stay running as it is getting rid of the same amount of heat as the house is absorbing. The higher the temp gets above 95 the more it begins to "loose ground" on the desired temp. And why your system cycles on and off when it's cooler than 95. Here in the STL area we have approximately 1000 cooling hours and 2000 heating hours per year as a general rule of thumb.

One way you can do a quick check on determining if your A/C system is cooling properly is to Stick a thermometer in the return air as close as you can before it enters the furnace/air handler. Take another temp reading as close as possible after the evaporator coil (the "A" coil)in the supply air duct.....after taking the 2 temp readings subtract the supply air temp from the return air temp.

The acceptable range for this is 18 to 22 degrees, with your preferred target temp being 20. If you are out side of those ranges then something is wrong and you are paying too much to cool your house.

And as stated before. Clean the Condenser coil of the outside unit. Grass clippings, dirt, and especially cotton wood seeds can dramatically reduce the airflow across the coil and cause the unit to use alot more energy than it needs to just to over come the airflow restriction.
 
Well my bill just hit $400 for the first time. My wife keeps our bedroom at a cool 68 at night. 3 250w MH, 2 54w t5 and 24 3w LEDs. All LED lighting is looking better and better.
 
I live in a 900 sqft th and until a few weeks ago I was paying $14 per day for electricity at $.119 per KWH. My AC unit was yes WAS 30yo and was drawing 5kw's when on but was only a 2.5 ton unit. My new unit is also a 2.5 ton unit and it only draws 2.6 kw's. My electric dropped by $7 per day do to this. My July costs were $364 and that was with a week of the new AC unit so it should have gotten to $400 +. This month I should pay less then $200. Get that ac init replaced.

Oh and FWIW we actually keep the place 2 degrees cooler now and still save $7 per day.
 
Skimmed through, but just wondering where you got those prices from, and when? I have not seen under .14 per kwh in st louis co, and pretty sure they just raised it again two months ago. I have been wrong before tho..

U4ick.. Thanks for the info.. Now I have to check that out..
 
Last edited:
How about budget billing? No surprises. Forget the huge gas bills in winter and electric bills in summer.

$175 per month. 3,000sf, 2 tanks (1 MH, 1 T5), and 2 adult children who forget that light switches turn lights off as well as on.:headwallblue:
 
Well my bill just hit $400 for the first time. My wife keeps our bedroom at a cool 68 at night. 3 250w MH, 2 54w t5 and 24 3w LEDs. All LED lighting is looking better and better.


It's not the halides causing this it's setting the thermostat at 68 that's doing it! Setting your thermostat below 70 is simply ridiculous and unnecessary. I have approximately 2800sqf and the lowest I will ever set it is at 75. The only times this may not e enough are on the 100+ days and even then it is only on the second floor that gets too warm. Raise your temperature and take off some clothes and turn on a few fans or run your AC to death and burn out your compressor. Your choice.
 
Of course it's the temp setting that causes the high electric use. We are much happier sleeping in a cool room so that won't be changing. We raise the temp to 77 during the day when we're out and 73 when we are hope and awake. Keeps me from needing a chiller also. Only one more month to think about it then fall is here.
 
Back
Top