Ductless air conditioning solutions for 2 story houses.
A c pushing more air to 2nd floor.
The belief is that closing a vent will simply push the air onward to other parts of the home improving energy efficiency.
Take this concept to the next level by having an hvac professional install a climate zone system like the trane comfortlink ii zoning system.
If your air conditioner is on the bottom floor of your home this can exacerbate the problem even more since the length of ductwork extending to the upper floors increases.
Upper floor rooms can be difficult to heat and cool.
The hot air collecting near the ceiling is pushed outside the home by the exhaust fan.
Homeowners typically close vents in an attempt to redirect air away from unused spaces.
Leaving the door open enables more hot air to be drawn into the room for exhausting.
Regardless of where your air conditioner is located in your townhouse if you have a multi level home you have a lot of ductwork that snakes.
Leaky or unbalanced ducts.
This forces your a c system to direct more air upstairs.
If a heater or air conditioning unit sits in a basement and is separated from an upstairs bedroom by a garage attic and or crawl space air can get lost in those areas along the way reducing the amount of cool air that makes it to the upstairs room.
Sometimes the problem is simply that your air conditioner must work too hard trying to push cool air up to the second level.
If you partially close some of the vents on the first floor this can frequently help your cooling system force more cool air to the second floor of your home.
Installing an attic fan removes heat collected in the attic allowing the insulation between the second floor ceiling and the attic to be more effective.
The diy way to do this is to close a few not all vents on the first floor.