It has been almost three months since we moved into our new house and the winter months are now upon us. That means, huge gas bills for heating the house. I have been worried about keeping my heating costs down since moving into the house. Looking at the results, the numbers are all over the place in terms of what temperature people leave their heat on. 21% said 72º F or more, 19% said 65º F or less, 18% said 68º F, 10% said 67º F, 10% said 69º F, 10% said 70º F, 7% said 66º F, 4% said 71º F. I have been aiming at 69º F.
To be more efficient and cost efficient, I just bought programmable thermostats. They let me set schedules for each day of the week. So I can set them to turn at 69 or down to 63 each day, four times a day. I make sure to turn the heat up an hour or so before my wife and I get home and then I make sure to lower it when we are not there. This way, if we forget to lower them manually, it is done automatically. Shabbos, a day I can't adjust the heat, I set on different schedules to automatically lower the heat and increase the heat during the times were are in the various heat zones.
I hope this investment of a hundred or so dollars on thermostats returns a positive ROI in just this winter. I opted for the Ritetemp brand simply because I had to buy five and Honeywell is way more expensive. My A/C units and alarm system are on Honeywell, but I went cheaper with the heat. The Ritetemps are guaranteed and come with a 5 year warranty. I actually feel like I am saving money right now...
Installation was fairly easy. Just two wires and four screws and two AAA batteries and it was working. Then I just programmed it and we are now set.


Comments
"How I use technology to follow my faith," would be an interesting post...I'm sure you have other examples besides this one.
Posted by: Todd Mintz | December 31, 2007 12:41 PM
Good idea, ill do it now.
Posted by: Barry Schwartz | December 31, 2007 1:37 PM
I own a Rudd gas heater. It just uses two wires to turn on the heater. The old thermostat was just an old-fashion mercury based thermostat which just shorts (connects) the two wires to turn ON the heater and opens (or disconnects) the wires to turn OFF the heater.
I wanted to try to save money on our energy bill so I bought this ritetemp 6022 programmable thermostat. The trouble is the instructions suck so bad, I can not figure out which terminal connections to use!
Anybody have any suggestions?
Posted by: richard | February 14, 2008 9:42 PM
How did the RiteTemp 6022s work for you? I'm considering installing one or more for this upcoming winter. Thanks!
Posted by: Greg | September 30, 2008 5:37 PM
I just installed one. It was fairly straight forward to install but doesn't work for crap. I checked that the fan turns on when I hit the fan switch, and if I set the temp to 90 degrees the furnace kicks on, but right now the temp says 68 and the 'target temp' says 75, and it's not on. Crappola.
Posted by: Dan | November 1, 2008 9:25 PM
I agree with Dan. Crappola! I put in a 6022 and my heat runs FOREVER now on cold days. After I thought about it, I realized the installation instructions never had me connect the "emergency heat wire". Turns out, there is no terminal to connect it to. So basically the heat pump will run forever because it cant heat the air good enough by itself to bring the internal temp of my house to 70. I'm definately gonna rip that thermostat out and get a new one!
Posted by: Chris | January 14, 2009 9:23 AM
The ritetemp is crap.. I just purchased one and my unit runs forever. The old mercury thermostat I had was far more efficient.
Posted by: Mar | June 26, 2009 11:01 PM
cant get the heat to work
Posted by: casey robert mceachern | October 10, 2009 6:28 PM
I agree with all of those who say this product is awful. You should be ashamed of putting out such a product. Trying to program this thing is counter intuitive, completley illogial and ridiculous. My 90 year old mother has had nothing put problems since she had it insalled.
Posted by: Frustrated | January 3, 2010 8:00 PM
First the temperature the 6022 unit thinks it is is incorrect. I had to use the calibration function to tell the unit that it wasn't 78 degrees in my house, it was actually 72. The instructions for the unit says "The thermostat comes from the factory calibrated to + or - 1F actual tempterature" - well, this unit wasn't calibrated correctly.
This is the 2nd morning after installing it and both times I woke up at 4am cold. I look at the unit, the target temp says 68 and the actual temp says 66.5 - so why isn't the heat coming on? If I press override and bump it up to 70 then heat starts coming on. I don't understand why heat doesn't come on when it should.
As far as installation, I agree the instructions are bad, there are extra wires that it doesn't explain - a friend had to call the 800 number on the instruction manual.
Posted by: Michael | March 3, 2010 5:08 AM