What to do about different rooms in the house being a completely different temperature

air-conditioningcentral-aircentral-heatingheatinghvac

I moved into a 30 year old home last December. There is a problem with the HVAC.

I have included a very crude drawing of the floor planenter image description here

The problem is that I can't maintain a comfortable temperature in the different rooms of the house. I don't really care about the basement because I seldom use it. The thermostat is located in the great room. It is not in direct sunlight.

Suppose for the sake of discussion that I want the temperature to be 70 degrees.

Suppose that it's cold outside and I set my thermostat to 70 degrees. The great room, kitchen will be about 70 degrees. The bathroom will be warmer. The den will feel about 65. The upstairs will be about 75 or so, and I can break a sweat.

It gets late at night and the bedrooms upstairs are too hot, so I turn the thermostat down to 65 to compensate. The air-conditioner kicks on and the temperature in the bedrooms is now about 70 (which is what I wanted), but it gets very cold downstairs.

When it is warm outside, I still have the problem that it is much warmer upstairs than downstairs.


Why does it seem impossible to maintain a comfortable temperature throughout the house? What do I need to do in order to maintain the same comfortable temperature in all the rooms?

Best Answer

It's a balancing problem, fairly typical for a one-zone heating system spanning an entire house.

Mind you, I'm a bit concerned with a setup that kicks on the A/C in heating season - being from a primarily heating climate, we typically have a "winter/summer" or "heating/off/cooling" mode switch either on the system/boiler/furnace or on the thermostat to prevent that sort of foolishness. If it's REALLY so hot in winter or cold in in summer that we want to change the mode, WE choose to change the mode, rather than leaving it up to a machine to decide.

Presumably you have forced air heat, since the same system is cooling. One approach to improve balance is to run the fan more to distribute air around the house and balance temperatures even when heat is not being delivered. A more basic step is adjusting the airflow to different parts of the system for heat delivery that more closely keeps things even - but if the same system is cooling this may be difficult to get balanced in a manner that works well for both, since heat rises and cold air sinks, left to itself.

The system may be oversized (so it quickly heats or cools the location of the thermostat, and then shuts off the fan, rather than running a large percentage of the time when it's cold out), but all systems are prone to being somewhat oversized much of the year in order to be large enough to heat on the coldest days and cool on the warmest days.

A good HVAC professional may well be worth talking to in order to tune your system as best it can be tuned. Moving to continuous circulation (perhaps at a lower fan speed) seems like it might be needed in this house to reduce stratification, at a guess. The only major downside if your system is not too noisy will be the electric bill for running the fan.

As a quick stopgap, examine your thermostat to see if it has a "fan" switch, typically with two positions - Auto (blows only to heat/cool) and "on" or "Continuous" - if the switch exists and is wired correctly, that should put the fan in continuous circulation mode - but you may want to alter the system to make that quieter and/or more efficient with a lower speed or even an entirely different fan/blower. And it may still need to be balanced to work better.