Poll: "Room temperature."

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chadachada123

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Jan 17, 2011
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It actually varies in my household depending on the time of year.

It's around 80 during the summer, and around 70 during the winter.

Between the two seasons, it mostly consists of me bitching about it being too hot or too cold based on what room temperature I was used to.
 

C F

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Jan 10, 2012
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Eh, it's sitting at 77°F at the moment, but I'll be comfortable up to around 85°.
 

dyre

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Mar 30, 2011
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Dags90 said:
dyre said:
I guess if you insist on dressing like an Eskimo at home, you'd need to keep the temp below 76 :p
Do your friends wear T-shirts in the winter? Or do they all just strip down when they come over to visit? Seems a bit awkward.
I guess they wear more layers (coat over a sweatshirt over a long sleeve shirt) and strip them as necessary. Not too many people wear sweaters here, as far as I've noticed.

And I only have friends over like once per week anyway.
 

chadachada123

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Dags90 said:
dyre said:
I guess if you insist on dressing like an Eskimo at home, you'd need to keep the temp below 76 :p
Do your friends wear T-shirts in the winter? Or do they all just strip down when they come over to visit? Seems a bit awkward.
The latter, actually, is the norm in the US (or at least this part of the US, Michigan, where 1/3 of the year is absolutely freezing).

When a new guest comes in, it's customary to offer to take their coat or at least show them where coats are hung (or say that coats can go anywhere), especially in winter.

Around the house, it depends on the house, but normal attire is shirts or hoodies, never full coats and rarely jackets unless the heating is broke.

"Sweaters" (unhooded) are a relative rarity, as hoodies are far more comfortable and easy to remove if zippered.

I note that your profile lists you as American, which makes me wonder what state you're from and what kinds of winters you have. In Michigan, our winters are, well, pretty damn cold, to say the least. Any attire suitable for outdoors would be absolutely horrendous to wear indoors for any notable length of time when the average outdoor temperature is below freezing but indoor temperature always at least 65 (but generally around 70 in winter). Edit: But I, myself, tend to wear hoodies outdoors even while it's below freezing, and generally wear them indoors as well because I'm lazy.
 

The Artificially Prolonged

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Jul 15, 2008
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Between 21C-23C is perfectly fine. Something that escapes my co workers. I'm convinced that if our office was located on the surface of the sun someone would complain about being cold.
 

Dags90

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Oct 27, 2009
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chadachada123 said:
"Sweaters" (unhooded) are a relative rarity, as hoodies are far more comfortable and easy to remove if zippered.

I note that your profile lists you as American, which makes me wonder what state you're from and what kinds of winters you have.
New Jersey. We don't have the worst winters in the U.S. (that "honor" probably belongs to North Dakota or something), but they're wintery. Snow, cold weather, salt everywhere.

I like sweaters for the winter. My duffel coat has an attached hood, and having to deal with two hoods is super annoying. Lighter crew or V-neck sweaters can be worn with a collared shirt for extra layering toastiness. I suppose a cardigan would work, but I have a narrow frame and they'd make me look sorta shapeless.
 

Smiley Face

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Jan 17, 2012
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I have it at 72 - a little warmer than I'd necessarily consider normal room temperature, but that's so that I'm nice and warm if/when I head outside or someone opens a window, because it's getting chilly now.
 

Tinygiant

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Feb 16, 2011
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I'm a "cold" person. If I could afford it/didn't have to worry about roommates' comfort, I'd keep a thermostat around 65 (Fahrenheit. Kelvin would be funny) year-round.

Seeing as I can't afford it/need to think about roommates' comfort, I try to keep it around 67-70.
 

game-lover

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Dec 1, 2010
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I don't know. I mean, we don't have thermostats or anything in the house so it could be whatever.
 

Bestival

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May 5, 2012
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Every year I play a little game called "don't use the heater till November", and I was doing pretty well this year. But then I got sick so atm its at 20C.
 

Owyn_Merrilin

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May 22, 2010
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I live in Florida, so "room temperature" at my house is about 78 degrees in the day, and 76 at night. I am /very/ happy when the temperature outside drops below that, since it means I can open the windows and cool down instead of going around wearing nothing but a pair of shorts trying to stay comfortable.
 

ClockworkPenguin

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Mar 29, 2012
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cotss2012 said:
ClockworkPenguin said:
STP (standard ambient temperature and pressure) is I think 25*C at 100kPa.
No, STP is zero C and 100 kPa. Room temperature and pressure is defined as 20 C and 101.325 kPa

SL33TBL1ND said:
Sorry, all of the answers are wrong. SLC is 25C at 100kPa [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Standard_conditions_for_temperature_and_pressure#Standard_laboratory_conditions].
Only in Australia, and nobody cares what they think.
I can only conclude that we have read different parts of the same Wikipedia article. "An unofficial, but commonly used, standard is standard ambient temperature and pressure (SATP) as a temperature of 298.15 K (25 °C, 77 °F) and an absolute pressure of 100 kPa (14.504 psi, 0.986 atm)". I already thought it was 25C because I was told that was standard room temperature in school.

Your stat is one line below "NIST uses a temperature of 20 °C (293.15 K, 68 °F) and an absolute pressure of 101.325 kPa (14.696 psi, 1 atm)".

However, right after that is "The International Standard Metric Conditions for natural gas and similar fluids are 288.15 K (59.00 °F; 15.00 °C) and 101.325 kPa.[2]"

So I suppose its pretty much a matter of preference.
 

lacktheknack

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Jan 19, 2009
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Dags90 said:
dyre said:
I guess if you insist on dressing like an Eskimo at home, you'd need to keep the temp below 76 :p
Do your friends wear T-shirts in the winter? Or do they all just strip down when they come over to visit? Seems a bit awkward.
T-Shirts in winter at 60 degrees F are nice...
 

dyre

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Mar 30, 2011
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Dags90 said:
chadachada123 said:
"Sweaters" (unhooded) are a relative rarity, as hoodies are far more comfortable and easy to remove if zippered.

I note that your profile lists you as American, which makes me wonder what state you're from and what kinds of winters you have.
New Jersey. We don't have the worst winters in the U.S. (that "honor" probably belongs to North Dakota or something), but they're wintery. Snow, cold weather, salt everywhere.

I like sweaters for the winter. My duffel coat has an attached hood, and having to deal with two hoods is super annoying. Lighter crew or V-neck sweaters can be worn with a collared shirt for extra layering toastiness. I suppose a cardigan would work, but I have a narrow frame and they'd make me look sorta shapeless.
Ok, I live in NJ too (Essex county, so actually pretty north NJ), and I definitely don't see too many people in sweaters here. And we've had the lamest winters ever (recently). Temperature jumps from mildly warm to uncomfortably cold to mildly warm within the span of a week, and it only really snows like once a year.

I'm surprised your friends don't strip layers (coats, sweatshirts) in your home (I assume they don't because you told me it's awkward!). Maybe because you keep your place so cold >:O
 

Yopaz

Sarcastic overlord
Jun 3, 2009
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First of all, thank you for having both Fahrenheit and Celsius, the conversion is easy, but I appreciate that.

I can't bear anything over 20C. I prefer 19 or sometimes as low as 17. It all depends on what I am doing. When I wake up I like it around 20, when I do anything else I want it to be 17-19.
 

LostintheWick

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Sep 29, 2009
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Tony said:
Where I live, 80 F is considered normal room temperature.
Holy crap... what is your profile gif/image from?! (I'm sure you have been asked this before... so sorry) It's funny AND disturbing.

OT: Sounds like you live in Florida or something. Maybe Texasish? 80 would kill me if that was the norm. Bleh.
 

RedDeadFred

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May 13, 2009
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I need the temperature to be at the very most 18 C. Otherwise I cannot sleep very well.
 

Dags90

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Oct 27, 2009
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dyre said:
Ok, I live in NJ too (Essex county, so actually pretty north NJ), and I definitely don't see too many people in sweaters here. And we've had the lamest winters ever (recently). Temperature jumps from mildly warm to uncomfortably cold to mildly warm within the span of a week, and it only really snows like once a year.

I'm surprised your friends don't strip layers (coats, sweatshirts) in your home (I assume they don't because you told me it's awkward!). Maybe because you keep your place so cold >:O
Were you away for the 20" Nor'easter two winters ago? Or does two years not fit your definition of "recent winters"? Not to mention last years October snowpacolypse, where I had to stay in a hotel for several days because our house lost utilities. The rest of last winter was unusually warm, but the average temperature in January was still just above freezing.

In the winter people take off their coats, obviously, but storing everyone's sweaters is problematic. Coats go on the coat hangers. Where are the sweaters supposed to go? Not to mention it just doesn't look very nice to walk around in an undershirt, it's kind of gauche for acquaintances.