Hi all. I have a 2 storey, ~1200 sq ft home in a hot climate. I have a single HVAC unit…central air and ductwork, electric AC/heat. There is no zoning to the system. The thermostat is downstairs.

Everything is great in the winter months. But in the summer months, the upstairs is absolutely stifling. I don’t have a thermostat upstairs, but it feels like it stays at least 10 degrees hotter than downstairs. I get that hot air rises, but considering the bedrooms are upstairs, it makes things unbearable.

My HVAC air handler and condenser are from 2008, so they are rather old and I’m likely to have to replace them soon. When I do so, I want to figure out how to keep the upstairs more comfortable.

Before I start asking companies for quotes, I want to figure out what I’m doing first. Some things I’ve come across…

  1. Install something like a Nest system with a remote temperature sensor. Place the temperature sensor upstairs and have the Nest use that to figure out when to cycle the AC on instead of the downstairs thermostat. I could install something like this myself instead of needing an HVAC company, though it isn’t necessary very efficient.

  2. Consult with an HVAC company about having dampers/a zoning system installed. From what I’ve read online, it seems like people are saying this isn’t really financially worth it. But if I’m at the point where I want a new system anyway, would it make sense?

  3. Window AC units are an obvious “solution”, but I can’t have them due to the HOA.

  4. I have read of suggestions of people saying to close the vents downstairs in the summer, but it seems like this is bad advice, as supposedly it will stress your HVAC and cause it to fail prematurely.

Edit: Just found a new one…setting the fan on the thermostat to “on” instead of “auto”. Although some people seem to warn of mold growth.

Would love to hear any and all suggestions. Thanks!

  • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Install a mini-split upstairs, it will keep that zone the correct temperature using it’s own thermometer. It can be downsized a bit as the main HVAC unit will help it out using your existing ducting.

    For exact design, I would say have one per bedroom or a multi-zone mini-split that can cover each bedroom.

    Many (most?) mini-splits are DIY friendly as well, if you want to save a bunch of money and install it yourself.

  • coolkicks@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Just piling on at this point, but we made 2 changes last spring that made summer so much more tolerable in our house.

    1. More insulation. I bought a cheap thermal camera on Amazon and found entire closets and a bathroom with no insulation. Those rooms are a solid 10+ degrees cooler now.
    2. More ventilation. Half my house didn’t have any soffit vents, but had attic vents. Adding soffit vents made that half the house 5 degrees cooler all on its own.

    And we haven’t found ourselves needing it, but a mini split has popped up a lot here already and is a great idea.

  • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    The mini-split route idea is a great solution, but I am wondering if you have an unvented or poorly insulated attic that is a contributing factor to your problem. If your attic space isn’t setup properly and you throw a mini-split at the problem, it is sort of like pumping water out of a boat without fixing the leak that is flooding the boat. Even something as “simple” as a powered attic vent could help in HVAC performance and operating costs. If the hot air can’t vent or your insulation is inadequate, it just stacks down and heats the top floor.

    The other thing I would be looking at is if the HVAC run up to the second floor is done properly or if the dampers are not right. A house that size really shouldn’t have much trouble if everything is balanced right.

    Closing vents on the first floor and leaving the second floor open will increase the wear on the fan and may decrease efficiency if not enough air can be moved through the open vents. Knowing how bad an idea that is would require some measurements and math.

    Having the nest with a second temp sensor would just force your HVAC to work harder to cool the upstairs. The single sensor nest can be a smart move to reduce costs with the higher degree of control.

    Having dampers installed does more or less the same thing as closing vents, but with a higher cost. A zoned system is expensive and kind of silly on a house of that size.

    • dingus@lemmy.worldOP
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      19 days ago

      The mini-split route idea is a great solution, but I am wondering if you have an unvented or poorly insulated attic that is a contributing factor to your problem. If your attic space isn’t setup properly and you throw a mini-split at the problem, it is sort of like pumping water out of a boat without fixing the leak that is flooding the boat. Even something as “simple” as a powered attic vent could help in HVAC performance and operating costs. If the hot air can’t vent or your insulation is inadequate, it just stacks down and heats the top floor.

      Unfortunately, I don’t live in a free-standing house. It’s a townhouse, so it’s connected to other units so I don’t think that I can make changes to the attic.

      The other thing I would be looking at is if the HVAC run up to the second floor is done properly or if the dampers are not right. A house that size really shouldn’t have much trouble if everything is balanced right.

      I don’t seem to have any dampers at all as far as I can tell.

      Having the nest with a second temp sensor would just force your HVAC to work harder to cool the upstairs.

      Yeah, I get that I would be pushing the HVAC system to simply be on more, but at the very least I could actually set the temperature upstairs instead of having it fluctuate so wildly. Often, I’ll set the temp low at night to be more comfortable. It’ll be to the point where I’m basically freezing with the sun down. But then in the morning, when the sun rises it’s unbearably hot.

      The single sensor nest can be a smart move to reduce costs with the higher degree of control.

      What do you mean by this?

      Having dampers installed does more or less the same thing as closing vents, but with a higher cost. A zoned system is expensive and kind of silly on a house of that size.

      So there’s no real reason to get dampers installed then?

      • Nougat@fedia.io
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        19 days ago

        If you’re in a townhouse, you have an association. The association would be responsible for the common attic and its insulation. Bring this concern to the attention of the board. Could be other people have the same problem and the fix could be attic-related.

        • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          Most town houses have fire walls up to the roof, so it’s your own liability and issue as it’s not a common space.

        • bitchkat@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          LOL good one! Anytime there is damage to common areas, the affected homeowners have to file a claim on their HO6. Its the stupidest thing I’ve ever encountered. Roof leaked and I had water damage in the ceiling. I had to file a claim for the HOA’s $5k deductible.

      • Death_Equity@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        You would have to get a GC out to inspect the attic and then give you a written recommendation of alterations, which you then would take to your association. Talk with your neighbors and see if they have the same issue, them jumping in on the issue would offer a greater chance of approval. It is possible the association may pay for it if the problem is attic venting, insulation would likely fall on you.

        Forcing the system to run more to compensate for the upstairs would drive up your electric bill and may not actually help if the problem is in the attic or balance of the HVAC. You could set the temp lower at night to accomplish the same thing as dual sensors, but you still are just throwing money away that should be better spent on addressing the issue directly.

        Having a nest vs non-smart thermostat allows you to set schedules in a smarter way than a regular tstat.

        Having dampers allows you to balance the system so the downstairs gets less air than the upstairs, instead of you having to go around closing vents and the downstairs would be cooled better than just shutting vents and sending most of the air upstairs.

  • SwearingRobin@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    I dont have HVAC specific advice for you, but I’ve lived in a well isolated house in a hot environment (42C max temperatures) and what we did was open basement windows and atic windows, and have a fan point out of the attic window. This created a draft that exhausted the hottest air in the house out, and while upstairs was always hotter than downstairs, it was much more bearable than without.

    I imagine a similar setup would help you get the cooler air from downstairs up, and a big advantage is that you can try it with very little cost and commitment.

    I don’t know how your house is configured, it might not be a solution for you. We have a pretty habitable attic, not those insulation filled dens I see in American houses, so it was pretty easy to try it for us.

    Also, we opened and closed the windows every day, we didn’t leave it open overnight.

  • Nomecks@lemmy.ca
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    19 days ago

    Turn on any upstairs bathroom fans. I find it gives the hot air an escape and allows more cool air to flow upstairs

    • satanmat@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      Right here @dingus.

      During the summer, close the down stairs registers.

      Also yes, if your system can, leave the fan blowing, that way you keep the air circulating.

      Our thermostat is downstairs, and this is what we do.

      • dingus@lemmy.worldOP
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        19 days ago

        I know multiple people say to close the downstairsregisters, but HVAC sources that I look at say that it greatly stresses the system if you do this and that it’s a bad idea.

        • satanmat@lemmy.world
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          19 days ago

          You have registers upstairs right? That should provide enough flow so you’re not stressing your system

          • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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            19 days ago

            If you close a register all pipes and joints between the furnace and the register will be under more pressure than designed and can force the joints to cause leaks, this can push humid air into joist spaces as well.

            Theres lots of potential issues, putting a damper as near to the source as possible prevents this issue.

          • dingus@lemmy.worldOP
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            19 days ago

            Haha well true. I just presume that if you have dampers built into the system by an HVAC company that steps would be taken to ensure it doesn’t mess up your system.

            • linuxguy@lemmy.gregw.us
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              19 days ago

              I’ve never seen manual dampers that smart. 🤷 Give closing up downstairs a shot and if your evaporator turns into a block of ice, well, then you let it thaw and know your need more air flow.

              • dingus@lemmy.worldOP
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                18 days ago

                Haha. Well I don’t mean the dampers themselves are smart. I mean that the HVAC companies will do pressure checks make sure things are flowing and vented properly if they are adding in dampers in particular areas.

  • nick@midwest.social
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    19 days ago

    Minisplits. I put one in every bedroom because even with a big new hvac system, the second floor was too hot.

    They work wonders.

  • Draupnir@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    Just had to solve this problem myself recently. Same issue, upstairs stifling while downstairs stays nice and cool. For a whole year I just ran the system a bit colder, but that made the downstairs freezing in order to make the upstairs feel normal. Not to mention all of the energy waste running the system for so long, my home is 2300 ft.² so I went for the dual zone with a mechanized damper. You could save on the cost by installing a manual damper that you could adjust as needed so far the system marks very well and my upstairs can get nice and cold, while the downstairs is a cozy warm temperature. I paid an HVAC company $2,300 for this to be done, but the manual damper would have been just $600.

    Other options I considered though were going to mini split route like the other comments suggest, or if your HOA is strict about even that, you could even use an indoor AC or two, and have the exhaust vents blowing out the window.

    • BombOmOm@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      indoor AC or two

      Yeah, these also work pretty well, OP. Just make sure you get the ones with two hoses, not just one for exhaust. The single hose ones create a vacuum in your house that sucks in outside air making them significantly less efficient.

      • Draupnir@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        Oh dang I didn’t even know there was a two hose type. It makes sense though since it would be sucking the room air through to exhaust outside, creating a vacuum

    • SchmidtGenetics@lemmy.world
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      19 days ago

      Jeez at 2,300 feet you should have two central airs already or a vastly optimized system that should have handled that. That’s shitty code or builder unfortunately.

      • Draupnir@lemmy.world
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        19 days ago

        Home was built in 1997 so maybe things were different! I certainly wouldn’t mind another central air unit or heat pump

  • toddestan@lemmy.world
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    19 days ago

    I had the same problem, in a similar sized townhome. My solution was similar to your first option. I bought and installed a wireless thermostat. This was back in the late 2000’s, so it predates the “smart” thermostats like the Nest. It’s just a basic programmable thermostat you can move around.

    It works well enough. In the summer, I can move it upstairs so the upstairs stays cool. In the winter I could move it downstairs, but generally I leave it upstairs anyway because that’s where the bedrooms are. I remember the thermostat was a bit pricy back in the day, but I’m still using it some 15 years later so I’ve gotten my money’s worth out of it.

  • jo3shmoo@sh.itjust.works
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    18 days ago

    From the “redirect the vents” side of things, I’ve been doing this manually for the 7 years with no ill effects. Last year I added a Flair system and Ecobee to automatically balance using the registers. They have back pressure detection to prevent damage to the HVAC system so there’s always enough vents open. At least in my scenario it’s been a game changer for the third floor of our townhouse. As we’ve headed into warmer months our bedroom is actually cool in the evenings and the lower floors are normal temperatures. During the winter our living space on the second floor was cozy without blasting the bedrooms and making it too hot to sleep. With the number of vents I had it cost just over 1K to do, but that was way cheaper than it would have been to have the house and system rezoned.

    I’m into smarthome stuff so now I’ve actually got room level presence detection going and tying that back to Flair with Home Assistant so we only cool or heat occupied rooms. Wife is a very happy camper in her now temperature controlled office, and it only targets the office when she’s in it.

    • dingus@lemmy.worldOP
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      17 days ago

      This sounds super interesting! I didn’t know that smart vents were a thing. I’d like to get some more smart home tech stuff in general and this seems up my alley. Plus my vents seem to be stuck open anyway so it wouldn’t hurt replacing them lol.

  • bjorney@lemmy.ca
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    19 days ago

    The nests (and many other thermostats) let you operate the fan independent from the AC.

    I configured my fan to run 15 minutes every hour regardless of whether or not the AC/heat is running and it fixed all of my issues with the upstairs being way too hot.

  • marshadow@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    I use a portable AC - this is different from a window unit. The unit itself stands up inside your room, and it has a flexy hose that goes into a flat panel that’s about 10 inches high and expandable widthwise. You lift the window a bit, put the flat panel in the open spot, then close the window so the light pressure keeps the flat panel in place. It’s all on the indoors side of the screen, so it counts as being inside your house and nobody can complain.

    (Assumptions: you have the typical American sliding windows, and your HOA doesn’t have rules about the inside of your house like curtain color or whatever)

  • Scrawny@lemm.ee
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    19 days ago

    Not an HVAC tech, but where are your air returns located? I would agree that keeping the fan on will help mix the air in the house. Closing all the registers on the lower floor might stress the system, but you could close a few I’d wager and be safe.

    • dingus@lemmy.worldOP
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      19 days ago

      There is a single air return upstairs and the filter has been somewhat recently replaced

  • AA5B@lemmy.world
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    18 days ago

    Here’s a couple of cheaper ideas you can try before replacing your unit:

    • I have a smart thermostat that lets me configure the fan to be on X minutes every hour. Helps circulation, evens out temps
    • it has remote sensors, and I can tell it which to follow at any time or to average
    • I have partly closeable vents, so I can direct more heat downstairs in winter, more cool upstairs in summer. This is not as effective as dampers and you need to watch shutting down too much airflow, but it’s cheap diy that can make a difference
    • my brother swears by pointing a pedestal fan up the stairway
  • mctoasterson@reddthat.com
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    18 days ago

    Same issue as you. Second floor bedroom above the garage gets really hot, but we can’t stick a window unit out the front of the house because it would be conspicuous, ugly, and prohibited by HOA.

    What I do have is access to the attic part that is adjacent to that room. So what I’m thinking of doing is punching a hole thru the drywall of the bedroom into the attic, mounting a window type AC unit in there so the attic is the “waste heat” side. I would install a drip tray to handle the condensation, and maybe something else to vent additional moisture and heat out of the attic. They make solar powered fans you can install that pull air out the top of the roof.