Greetings,
I stumbled across this site as I surfed the internet thingie looking for information and I am very impressed. I am hoping I can get some good advice.
I live in central Texas (outside of Austin) and have recently had a partial attic conversion done for a home office/guest room on my 1 story house. The addition is ~160 sq ft and is accessed by an external staircase—with no other interior connections to the house. The office is tied into my central HVAC (3 tons) with a 12 inch return and 2 ducts. The programmable thermostat is downstairs at the opposite end of the house (east side).
I think many of you can see where this is going. Even though the room is very well insulated, because of its location in the attic and facing towards the west, the ambient temperate in the room is anywhere from 5-10 degrees different from the thermostat (hotter in the summer, cooler in the winter). So, if I set my AC at 78 (as is normal), the house is very comfortable, but the office is running at ~83-85 degrees. I can get the attic office colder if I want by lower the temperature on the main thermostat.
So my question is what is the best way to resolve this issue?
Looking on the internet and consulting my common sense (which may not always agree), so far I have found:
1. Set the HVAC fan to “On” as opposed to “Auto” to help even the temps.
2. “Balance” the air flow in the house by closing off the registers downstairs to drive more air into the attic office (this seems common sense, but I am concerned about sacrificing the comfort level downstairs in the living space).
3. Install a Split Ductless HVAC unit for the attic office
4. Suffer
I should say that I work from home when I am not traveling, so the office is occupied during most days.
I appreciate any advice or suggestions.
Thanks,
Todd
I stumbled across this site as I surfed the internet thingie looking for information and I am very impressed. I am hoping I can get some good advice.
I live in central Texas (outside of Austin) and have recently had a partial attic conversion done for a home office/guest room on my 1 story house. The addition is ~160 sq ft and is accessed by an external staircase—with no other interior connections to the house. The office is tied into my central HVAC (3 tons) with a 12 inch return and 2 ducts. The programmable thermostat is downstairs at the opposite end of the house (east side).
I think many of you can see where this is going. Even though the room is very well insulated, because of its location in the attic and facing towards the west, the ambient temperate in the room is anywhere from 5-10 degrees different from the thermostat (hotter in the summer, cooler in the winter). So, if I set my AC at 78 (as is normal), the house is very comfortable, but the office is running at ~83-85 degrees. I can get the attic office colder if I want by lower the temperature on the main thermostat.
So my question is what is the best way to resolve this issue?
Looking on the internet and consulting my common sense (which may not always agree), so far I have found:
1. Set the HVAC fan to “On” as opposed to “Auto” to help even the temps.
2. “Balance” the air flow in the house by closing off the registers downstairs to drive more air into the attic office (this seems common sense, but I am concerned about sacrificing the comfort level downstairs in the living space).
3. Install a Split Ductless HVAC unit for the attic office
4. Suffer
I should say that I work from home when I am not traveling, so the office is occupied during most days.
I appreciate any advice or suggestions.
Thanks,
Todd