Snowniggers from across the northern hemisphere.
Whats the temp outside
Whats the temp inside your house/residense
What do you use for heating?
Snowniggers from across the northern hemisphere.
Whats the temp outside
Whats the temp inside your house/residense
What do you use for heating?
0C
about 20C in my room
portable radiator
4°
19°
central heating (natural gas)
o7
I had this made since my house was built in the 60's and insulation is not as good as new houses. I went balls out in state of the art fireplace tech. The energy output is beyond anything i have ever seen. Five logs is enough to raise the temp of the entire house by two degrees.
I just call it. "The beast"
-4c
18c
gas furnace
>25° inside of house
and you brag how you're cold free ? lol
25c is more than comfortable
It's 20.5c in my room and I'm warm
I like to walk around in a t shirt
25° si way too hot, 17-20° should be the maximum tolerated inside houses.
1°C
about 24°C I think
-10
17
Firewood and baseboard heaters.
-1°C
22°C
District heating. They burn peat to heat water and pump it to all over the city to apartment radiators.
What is this in normal units?
0
-11c when i drove an hour ago
idk maybe like 20c
portable radiator
>outside
-3 C
>inside
20 C during daytime, 15-17 C during night to sleep better
>heting
geothermal heating, it was fucking expensive to install but very cheap to run
>25°C
jesus fucking christ, are you a literal arab?
That's the only explanation I can come up with as to why on fucking Earth ANYBODY would warm the inside of their homes that much.
-3C
17C
A fucking automated radiator that decided that 17C is good enough for me.
I'm freezing over here.
Should probably move my desk away from the window.
>17C
>I'm freezing over here.
ahmed
>geothermal heating
What you have a volcano?
+1
+20ish
Electric radiators
And even if the fire is put out that's like 100kg of iron that'll keep warm for hours.
No, t-shirt and shorts is all I wear when I'm at home
It's a pipe that goes deep underground if I'm not entirely mistaken
>tfw - 10 °C outside and snowing
>tfw almost 30 °C inside when woodstove are all burning
user...
like this and with a heat pump.
Just turn the dial up, Jarmo.
>sister always puts way too many logs in the stove
>suddenly the house is scorching hot
>tfw walking around with shorts and t-shirt in the middle of winter and still sweating
Not a snownigger but anyway. It is about 0C right now. And about 18C in my room.
I use central heating (natural gas)
I often turn it off and use a portable radiator. It feels comfy.
It's at max, the shit just won't heat up unless it's freezing outside.
Might need to bleed it now that I actually gave it a thought.
Residential geothermal systems typically only go about 150m deep. It's entirely different from deep geothermal energy (as they have in Iceland for example) which involves digging many kilometers to directly extract superheated steam (which is then used in a turbine to generate electricity). Residential systems, on the other hand, simply seek to keep a fluid (typically a propylene-glycol mix) at something like 5 or 10°C all year long, which is then used in a heat pump (similar to any old heat pump, except that the source-side is the returning geothermal fluid rather than ambiant air). The point of having a heat pump with a geothermal source rather than an ambiant air source is that the efficiency of heat pumps is directly correlated with the source-side input temperature. In heating mode (during winter), an air-to-air heat pump will be extremely inefficient at -10°C, and will require auxiliary electric heating (which is also inefficient). If you have geothermal though, then it doesn't matter if it's -30°C outside, the returning fluid will still be more or less the same, and so you'll still only need to feed a little power to the compressor and pumps in order to heat your home. Same principle applies in cooling mode, when it's too hot outside for ordinary air-to-air heat pumps to operate efficiently.
Thus, you invest a substantial amount of money initially, in order to keep your heat pump at nearly optimal performance levels (and thus much cheaper) for its operational lifetime.
oh, and obviously 150m is only for vertical boreholes. As the Estonian pointed out, there are also horizontal systems, which are cheaper to install but are less efficient than their vertical counterparts.
>yfw no wood stove
Sounds nice.
Iron and some sort of stone that keeps the heat for hours.
its -17 here
>tfw will never be nordic
>tfw the lowest temperature I might have this winter is about -8C
-18C outside, -25C with windchill
About 21C inside
>25 degrees
Jesus christ, your house is warmer than my house in winter, by about 10~15 degrees.
>Northern Europeans complain about the cold weather yet spend 99% of their time in overheated rooms
Simply ebin.
look it up
>has a season
>doesn't even experience it
You disgust me.
Put on a jumper and long pants, you piece of shit. It's winter and supposed to be cold.
>let me tell you about your climate
fuck off cunt
25C would be too fucking hot, also very dry and would cost $$$
This winter i only use logs that i cut myself last year.
-15°C outside
20.1 °C inside
I experience it everyday when i go out the door. When its -10 degrees outside its nice to skip all the clothes and "chill" out on the sofa in a tshirt and a beer..
-4°
+24°
Water based radiators in a modern apartment house (2007)
Looking forward to visiting my parents this christmas to enjoy some open fireplace action
>tfw 25cm of snows tuesday
>shlomo will fire me if i am late to work
ITS NOT FAIR
It's -1 outside
probably like 20something inside (65F)
I have a natural gas furnace
My old shitty Oschlo apartment is a bit chilly so I have a cheap electrical heater from Clas Ohlson right next to my battle station. It worked out quite well.
>why dont you turn off heating in the winter
-7
Probably like 17 or 18 because of shitty insulation
-1 C
+23.6 C
I find +23 to be pretty comfy. You can wear a t-shirt and no need for woolly socks
>outside
-2
>inside
12
No heating today, usually firewood
One hour ago was -6°C
Inside 17-18°C
Pic
+1
+24
Carpets
>Electric radiators
I though snowniggers know their shit when it comes to heating.
Electric heating is like 4-5 times more expensive than NG.
How high are your electricity bills?
+7, 23, electric radiator.
The sweet point is typically in the 22-24 region.
When I'm asleep I like it cooler, like 18 or so.
what's that?
It looks like an unholy union of fan-coils and radiators.
21c inside
Pic related outside
Hot water pipes in the floor
Somewhere around 20C I think.
Power isnt that expensive. Plus; 99% of our electricity is hydro