More Ways to Save Electricity
More Ways to Save Electricity
There are many ways to cut down on how much electricity and energy your family uses each month. The most common tips involve ways to either heat or cool your home or efficiently in the summer and winter. Besides those though, there are actually many other things you can do which will help cut the electricity usage and costs as well.
1. Try using fans instead of an air conditioner. This tip is particularly useful during the spring and fall, but it can also be handy on mild summer days as well. In some cases for example, it can get very nice outside at night time in the summer. And on these pleasant nights, you don’t have to use an air conditioner to pull your home. Instead it you can simply open a window, and sit a box fan in it. This fan will pull the cool air in from outside to cool your home. This has the added benefit of bringing in fresh air to. You can even use a second fan to work as an exhaust, which will push hot air out of another window.
Since hot air rises, you’ll see the best results from having an exhaust type fan in the attic, or at a higher location than your window fan. If you’re not able to set up an exhaust fan of this type, you can get similar results with a standard ceiling fan. Simply put it in reverse so that it sucks air upwards instead of blowing air downwards.
2. Turn things off when they’re not in use. Modern day conveniences have caused most of us to have very bad habits were electricity usage is concerned. Some people for example, will never turn off a light. They leave lights on in every room even if it’s the middle of the day and no one is in that room. This wastes energy, and increases your electricity bill dramatically. The same habits are seen with other electronic devices and appliances.
Try to get into the habit of turning things off when you’re not using them. Turn off lights when you leave a room, turn the computer and monitor off when you’re finished using it, and don’t fall asleep with the TV on all night.
You can even take this one step farther, and unplug things when you’re not using them. If you have many digital clocks in your home for example, you might try unplugging all but one or two of them. If you have electric coffeemaker, unplug it which are finished with your coffee each day. Anything that plugs into a wall, will still use a small amount of electricity, even when the device is not turned on.
3. Change your lightbulbs. You may or may not already know this, but the simple act of removing standard lightbulbs and replacing them with the newer energy-efficient ones, can reduce your electric bill by amazing amounts. The amount of money you save from doing this will vary depending on the size of your home, how many people live in your home, and how often you use the various lights in your home as well. Some people notice a small difference such as $20 less on their electric bill when they make this change. Others however, can see as much as $50 to even $100 difference in their utility bills.
These new energy-efficient lightbulbs looks strange to some people. They are curly, and there are even named pigtails. Some people even worry that their globes will not fit over at these new bulbs, so they have not made the change. Regardless of how they look though, they are actually designed to fit into the same space that the old-fashioned lightbulbs do.










