Reduce internal heat from appliances and lighting
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Appliances, cooking, and incandescent lighting add significant heat to indoor spaces. Shifting when and how you use them can noticeably lower room temperatures during summer.
How to Do It
- Cook without the oven: Grill outdoors, use a microwave or slow cooker, or prepare cold meals during peak afternoon heat. An oven can raise kitchen temperature by 10°F or more.
- Run heat-producing appliances at night: Dishwashers, clothes dryers, and washing machines all generate heat. Schedule them for cooler evening or early morning hours.
- Switch to LED bulbs: Incandescent bulbs convert 90% of their energy to heat. LEDs run far cooler and use a fraction of the electricity.
- Power down idle electronics: TVs, computers, and game consoles generate heat even in standby. Unplug them or use a power strip you can switch off.
Tips
- A single incandescent bulb adds roughly the same heat as a small space heater over time
- Pressure cookers and air fryers produce far less ambient heat than a conventional oven
- Line-drying clothes instead of using the dryer eliminates a major heat source
Created: 4/23/2025, 10:42:46 PM diyfree
LED bulbs, outdoor grill or microwave (optional), power strip (optional)