i can't really complain about the air upstairs today. it's almost 30
outside, with the humidex. and, yes, we have a humidex, which is weird
this time of year, even if not coming out of a brutal winter. so, it's
reasonable to have the air on.
but maybe not so high.
it's more than a bit odd to have it be 25 degrees outside and have my
heaters (set to 21) on. not a bit, but half-blast. that's independent
corroboration, really. what it demonstrates is that the air conditioning
is making the basement colder than room temperature. otherwise, the
heat wouldn't be kicking in. but what's worthwhile is that that's an
objective standard - lower than 21 is lower than normal, and
justification to push back.
it's partly because it's
early in the year, though. i remember the thermostat reading 26 when i
moved in. it'll warm up over the summer. for now, i've just got the
windows open.
see, even if it does warm up, though, that doesn't
mean i'm going to want to keep the windows closed. it's not just the
temperature, it's also the air quality. air conditioning makes the air
so unnaturally dry. i really prefer that hot, moist natural summer air. a
natural breeze is infinitely superior to a machine vortex (on a
different floor at that).
but i'm a little worried about
how that's actually going to work. it's going to rain sometimes. i'm in a
basement (also note - i haven't seen any ants since the first week i
moved in, but an open window is an invitation), so i'm going to have to
close it sometimes. if i keep the window open and let the breeze run
through, is that going to put the air upstairs on higher power? i mean,
that it's working at all down here suggests it's sucking up air through
the floor. is it just going to turn itself up higher to suck more? if it
does, it could just make it worse in the end, especially in rain
situations.
on that note, my best tactic may be to try and
crash it. that happens, right? it overheats, or something? if i just
blare all the heat i can muster, i could conceivably overdrive it...
i'm
not really considering that right now, it's just an idea. a last
resort. i get that the guy upstairs would be in considerable discomfort
if i were to crash his air (he's a big guy). right now, it's just a
combination of unusual factors. i'm going to assume things will right
themselves as the basement slowly warms up.
there's
probably some kind of equilibrium point, where very small amounts of
heat will warm it up a little bit, a little more may actually make it
colder in here, and large amounts will overpower. i'd probably have to
get that information empirically.