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Energy Tips For Your Attic

On a hot day, temperatures in an attic can reach 150o Fahrenheit or more. Much like a radiator transfers heat in the winter time to warm a room, a hot attic will transfer unwanted heat to the living spaces below, making you uncomfortable, pushing up your electric bills and wearing out your air conditioner.

Most homes have "passive ventilation" in attic -- vents that allow some of the hot air to escape. These may be openings under the eaves, at a roof gable or along the ridge.

Attic fans force hot air out of the attic space and replace it with cooler air entering through these vents. Electrical fans -- one or more, depending on the size of the attic -- can be positioned at the highest points of the roof, where the hot air rises. These require an electrical circuit and can be controlled three ways: by a switch, which means the fan runs only when you turn it on; a timer, so it operates at appointed times each day; or by a thermostat. which operates the fan whenever heat builds up and it is needed.

Simpler devices are wind-driven turbines (small rotating devices), which also can pull hot air from the attic and send it outside.

Insulating the attic is also important -- most climates in California require a minimum of R-38 insulation in the attic. ("R" means R-value.) Older homes often contain much less than this amount. Old insulation may also have compacted over the years, becoming less efficient. It should be removed and replaced.

(-- from California Life, The Sacramento Bee, 8/10/96)

Information from the California Energy Commission


Viewtech Financial Services, Inc.
3430 E. Miraloma Avenue, Anaheim, CA 92806
Phone: 800-998-8658
Fax: 714-632-8949
Web Site: www.viewtechfinancialservices.com
E-mail: mailto: information@viewtechfinancialservices.com