• yuri@pawb.social
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    11 days ago

    or management runs the heat less, which would’ve also been the perfect-world outcome of trying to talk to them like you suggested. occam’s razor and all that.

      • yuri@pawb.social
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        11 days ago

        you’re assuming apartments without thermostats are logging temps and sending them back to a central unit, which is then averaging the temperature of EVERY unit in order to maintain a temperature.

        once again, occam’s razor. the way this is usually done is just running the whole building’s heat at a set temperature for a set period of time every day. literally nothing you do as a tenant will change the amount of heat coming out of your vents/radiators.

        • FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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          11 days ago

          The machine heats the units. It stops when a specific temperature is reached. Opening the window will make it run for longer.

          • mrgoosmoos@lemmy.ca
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            11 days ago

            yes, and when I lived in a building with no per-unit temperature control, that temperature was above what I could tolerate, so windows open it was

          • yuri@pawb.social
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            11 days ago

            i have lived in an apartment in the US wherein the heat turned on the same day every year, and ran everyday starting and ending at the same times. from what i heard from my neighbors this was not uncommon for converted homes and public housing.

            not every heating unit works like you think it does!

            • FiniteBanjo@feddit.online
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              11 days ago

              If a heating unit runs on timers its timers either need adjustment or replace that thermostat.

              I refuse to believe a heater made in the last half century lacks external controls and if its older then that it’s probably filled with radon.

              Stop being a little bitch and talk to your landlord.

              • BurntWits@sh.itjust.works
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                11 days ago

                The apartment I was referring to used boiler heat, not furnace heat. It all came from one place and we couldn’t adjust it ourselves. Not shut-off valve for our unit, not even a water control valve to slow the flow rate of water for our unit. The superintendent was the only one who could control it. We were up on the top floor too so it was hotter up there. I did complain about the heat several times, but while we were hot, the lower floors would be comfortable or even cold (heat rises and all that), so usually she wouldn’t do anything about it. Any time someone would complain about the temp (either too hot or too cold) she’d do a building survey. If most people would agree then she’d change it, but usually the top floor was always too hot and the bottom floor was always too cold. We only lived there for a year before moving out.