techcode

joined 9 months ago
[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

TL;DR: No - I think across the Europe 19° to 21° is common during winter. Less than 19° if you're trying to save money and have old house (and here homes might actually go decades if not centuries older) with crap isolation; and maybe up to 22° if you have kids/baby and have good isolation.

The majority of Dutch keep it at ~19° during winter because of cost of gas/electricity. And then so far majority kind of hoped global warming isn't a thing. So during summers 25-30° (if not higher) also started to be a thing inside homes for those folks that don't have airco and have computer on their attic/zolder. And that's with shades/roll-blinds mostly down yet windows are open 24/7 so it circulates and cools off during night ...etc.

These days (actually almost last decade or so) the "joke" is that getting a house just about anywhere in The Netherlands is great investment because within just a few decades you'll [likely] have a tropical house next to a beach.

No wonder that pre-teenager kids need to pass a swimming lessons/certificate where test is basically "clothes and footwear" (they allow thinner jacket & sweater, borderline pajamas for pants and I guess no need for "Canadian Boots" and sneakers are fine) - where you're pushed with your back into the pool, and then you need to swim under some obstacles (floating platform), and through some hole in a plane/flag, and pull yourself out of the pool.

BTW I'm originally from Balkans - Belgrade/Serbia where "European continental" climate is, or at least was a thing when I was growing up. I would think Toronto and New York are very similar.

So at least 30° Celsius outside during summer (now regularly even more and sometimes closer or above the 40°C), and quite a few weeks/years where in just a few hours we went from 0cm to 50cm or more of snow, causing total transport collapse - which meant no school ;)

Anyway biggest issue for me during summer here in Amsterdam/NL (which is still below summer heat I grew up with in Belgrade/Serbia in terms of ° Celsius) - is the humidity.

Calculation/story wife and I (and family that came to visit us for extended period here in NL) have is basically:

- around 0°C and the Dutch are hopeless. I mean country is flat, yet cars and even trucks/lorries get stuck - obviously because many use summer tires, though also they just don't know what to do (e.g. shovel, sand/salt, rubber floor-mat) even when they have all-season/universal tires that people can go to mountain without snow chains
- 10°C or less outside might require a bit thicker pullover/sweater or even windbreaker jacket, and if it's <=5°, windy and sun isn't strong enough - I might feel like Timberland Pro, North Face parka jacket
- And yet 25°C or more outside might require you to wear short pants, t-shirt, flip-flops and hide from the sun or else you might get a heat stroke

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago (1 children)

Requirement of both inlet and outlet depends on quite a few things.

In Europe - homes heated by natural/earth gas central heater (sometimes also provides hot water) usually require "mechanical ventilation" - which is just a box with efficient fan that's always running and exhausting at least a little bit of indoor air, and you crank it up when cooking/showering/etc, as well as some form of grill/grate/opening to let outside air in.

It's not only because of using gas for cooking/heating - officially it's also to make sure your house doesn't build up too much of things like Argon that's creeping in from your crawl space/basement/etc.

For example Velux slanted ceiling/roof windows have that ventilation option built in where you can close/lock the window, but still allow fresh air (and no bugs/mosquitos) in.

Otherwise it's either some sort of ventilation grill on your windows/doors, beeing able to slightly tilt/crank some windows, cutout/opening for mail in your front door...

Or any other place where your house is not hermetically sealed :)

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

I just commented on basically the same - except it's more "structured" as Heat Recovery Ventilation also works the other way around.

So you can have fresh (as in new to your house, not the temperature itself) air coming in both in summer and winter - and in both cases it would be pre cooled/heated by the exhaust air.

[–] [email protected] 1 points 9 months ago

Living in The Netherlands - and although Gulf Stream and such make it much more timid/neutral than Norway, literally every home here has "mechanical ventilation" - for example https://www.ithodaalderop.nl/nl-NL/consument/product/03-00398

And at least for about a decade or so - "Heat Recovery" types of ventilation were already a thing - say https://www.ithodaalderop.nl/nl-NL/consument/product/03-00407

In your case it might be more effective to set this "Heat Recovery" in a way where it's heat from your server room used as "OUT" and then other places (say living room, kitchen, hallways) are "IN".