I have a ground floor brick apartment so I’m pretty well insulated from the summer heat for most of the day. If I can get the apartment cold enough at night by running fans (ventilation), I can often make it through the day without turning on the A/C.

That small room is the best case scenario because it has the box fan blowing in directly opposite the door which has a fan at it to pull the air out of that room.

The closest I get to the coldest night temperature is 4 degrees farenheit in that room. I’m guessing the walls are retaining some heat.

Is 4 degrees a respectable delta for $20 Lasko box fans or could I do better?

I’m cross ventilating as much as I can, but I have a weirdly shaped, weirdly windowed apartment and think I need about 3 more fans to circulate the air completely, but I don’t think I do better than what I have for that one room.

  • schipelblorp@sh.itjust.worksOP
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    5 hours ago

    That’s the basic theory I’m going with. Imagine a Y. Each of the top ends are two rooms with one window each. They are connected via a hallway to my bedroom on the bottom, which has two window on the opposite side of the building. The wind has the slightest tendency to blow down that Y so I have the air move in that direction.

    The only wrinkle is that even with two fans in that hallway to bring the air in, there’s still 3 temp difference between the top and the bottom, it gets to 1 if I flip one of those bottom fans to bring air in.

    But I also have windows that open horizontally, so I have plenty of open air above the windows that I occupy with venetian blinds, so I could probably do a better job of sealing that up to improve flow and decrease backwash.

    Edit: This comment brought to you by !dull_mens_club@lemmy.world