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If you can afford it, buy a single window AC unit, install it in your bedroom, and then live in there all summer. That's what my parents did when I was little and we lived in a house with no AC. If you can't afford that, a box fan in the window once the sun goes down, then shut it off in the early morning and close/black out the window/draw shades as soon as the sun is up to try and keep the cooler air in that one room for as long as possible.
What part of "without AC" did you fail to ducking understand?
I mean, pretty much any person with central AC would read that as “without central AC.” And the answer would be the same: Fucking install AC. Installing central AC is too big of a project for most, so a window unit is a decent stopgap.
Yup. A $100-200 window unit(personally I prefer "portable" units with the exhaust hose to the window - keeps the main unit out of the sun that causes it to work harder) will be your best bet every single time. But sure, go ahead and check the price of tinting every window(about $20 per window) or getting blackout curtains(~$20 per panel in my experience) or any of the myriad of lesser solutions. Then, when you've spent as much or more with worse results and finally cave on getting a small unit, you'll wonder why you ever did anything else before. Nevermind the fact that OP basically said "so aside from all the normal passive options, what else is left?" AC. That's what's left. Unless you want to advise them to replace all the insulation/windows/seals in their house.
Window units are the best bang for the buck. Don't worry about expensive ones, $100 goes a LONG way to cooling one bedroom. And it's cheaper than doing the whole house.
We have a big in wall unit in our apartment that can do the whole living space, but we hardly ever run it. We just run the bedroom one, set to like 70-75f, just to take the humidity out and chill it down a bit. A nice place to go cool down if you get hot while doing things around the house. We don't run it when we're not home, because even the cheapest Menards special can cool the room down in minutes, and it's cheaper to not run it when we don't need it.
Beware of the units with the hose... You're paying more, and trading the convenience of not lugging a big unit into the window (small ones really aren't that bad), for the inconvenience of having to dump the water (unless you pay more for one that can pump it out the window).
But by far the worst thing about the hose units, if they only have one exhaust hose, and no return hose? They are less efficient, because they create negative pressure in your house that sucks hot air in through every crack.
For more information see here.
Upvoted for Technology Connections. If you didn't link that video I was going to. Window units, if you can mount them or get help mounting them, are superior in every way.
tin foil and painters tape $1.50 per window.
winter blankets and old shirts.
couple with a window fan and a swamp cooler can reduce internal temps 10-15°.
poor af growing up. that's what we did. bonus points if you're in a trailer. you can open both ends and have fans blowing from one end to the other.
The main problem with swamp coolers is they don't work very well or at all in high humidity climates due to the way in which they cool air. I'm from East Coast US and it gets pretty damn humid in the summer, which is honestly worse than the heat some days. AC is honestly the best solution if dealing with heat and humidity because it combats both issues even if it can't fully cool a space.
Dryer climates though? Wet towel over a box fan all the way baby!
I mean, sure, if you want to look like you live in a meth lab. Or you could spend a little bit and have something 100x better and actually functional and not be miserable. This is like that whole boot problem: you can only afford $20 boots so you buy them and they wear out in 6 months. Over 5 years you spend $200 when a nice pair that would've lasted as long or longer would cost you $100.
You can get an ac for like $60 new, like $20 on Facebook. Walmart has Artic Kings on sale every year for that much. But yeah, spend hours of your time Macgyvering a makeshift solution that maybe drops you 10°. You know what "10° degrees cooler" is where I am? 100°. You'd still be plenty miserable.
yeah sure. the costs stop after you buy it. not like you have to pay to run it or anything.
I think you underestimate how poor some families are.