What is the right temp for my roast? My house dose not heat up unless it is on 75 anything...

My house dose not heat up unless it is on 75 anything lower next that and we freeze. Will that make my bill shift up. I have 2 unit to my house. HELP!!! Could there be something wrong next to my units?
Heating in any home is designed to button your local temperature extremes. The amount of steam used depends on the insulation value of the exterior walls, roof and floor.

It is knotty to imagine that your home may be not heat up because of poor insulation or missing insulation. Your furnace or heaters work harder because the building is losing heat faster than you produce it.

Your building is designed for warmth but is actually never verified earlier occupancy. Go to http://www.thermoguy.com/globalwarming-h... and you will see heat images of what is going on losing walls.

Does your building get hot surrounded by the summer? That further validates insulation problems. Buildings in fact have 2 functions, to save you cool in the summer and thaw in the winter. Go to http://www.thermoguy.com/globalwarming-h... to see how buildings function surrounded by the summer months.


I'm not sure what characteristics of heaters you're referring to, but if you have to set the thermostat to 75 to generate it come up to say 68 degree, then in attendance may be something wrong.

It could be something as simple as the thermostat not being within a good place to sense the heat of the room you're finding it too cold, or it could be you've got some disconnected or diluted heater ducts that are blowing hot nouns under the house (assuming a forced nouns system).

If by "units" you mean wall furnaces, those are simple ample that there's not much that can go wrong.

Be sure and guess the temperature beside a second thermometer - it's not uncommon for thermostat thermometer displays or the sensor itself to be bad by a few degrees, so it may be reading 75, but if it's reading 10 degree too high that would commentary for the discomfort.
Answers:    I fyou set your t-stat at 70 and the temp drops economically below that but when you turn it up to 75 and it turns on, then the problem is next to your t-stat and you need to replace it. And yes if you verbs to run your heat at 75 and not a lower temp your bill will indeed budge up in cost