Recently moved into a new house that has nothing blocking sunlight from the West - no trees, no back neighbors, etc. The master bedroom is a particularly big recipient of this constant afternoon sunlight as it sticks out to the west and has giant windows facing west that take direct sunlight from about 1230pm to 830pm every day right now. About 60% of the west wall is the large windows.
The windows have shudder shades on them that I keep shut and very dark drapes. It blocks virtually all the sunlight in true blackout fashion. However the room is still extremely hot (cannot get it below 78 until well after 9pm). Per HVAC repairman, HVAC is supposedly operating fine. So I have been thinking it is simply the orientation of the windows along with 100+ degree heat and no shade whatsoever just beaming into these windows every day.
I put a Bluetooth thermometer between the shades and the glass and was shocked to see during the hottest points it would get to over 120 degrees in between that space - was expecting more like 90ish. My assumption is that despite the shades and the drapes, some of this extremely hot air is leaking out and killing any chance the HVAC has to actually cool the room while the sun is heating up that air. The ceilings are fairly high in the bedroom and the vents are in the ceiling so my guess is that the hot air kills the A/C air before it even starts the journey down. I am looking at getting some solar shades installed on the outside of these windows and if my assumption is correct, I suppose that should help big time with my issue.
My question would be whether I am way off base in this thinking or if the shudder shades and the drapes should be enough to keep the sunlight/heat out despite how incredibly hot it actually gets near the windows? If they should be enough then perhaps the solar shield is a waste and I should push further on the HVAC efficiency.
Also any thoughts on the 120+ degree temperature? These are double paned windows that are about 15 years old and they have a slight tint on them. If I open the shades the air gets down to mid-90's but this of course makes the room sun filled and even harder to cool down.
This company has been recommended on TexAgs before: https://lonestarsolarscreens.com/ and planning to get a quote from them.
The windows have shudder shades on them that I keep shut and very dark drapes. It blocks virtually all the sunlight in true blackout fashion. However the room is still extremely hot (cannot get it below 78 until well after 9pm). Per HVAC repairman, HVAC is supposedly operating fine. So I have been thinking it is simply the orientation of the windows along with 100+ degree heat and no shade whatsoever just beaming into these windows every day.
I put a Bluetooth thermometer between the shades and the glass and was shocked to see during the hottest points it would get to over 120 degrees in between that space - was expecting more like 90ish. My assumption is that despite the shades and the drapes, some of this extremely hot air is leaking out and killing any chance the HVAC has to actually cool the room while the sun is heating up that air. The ceilings are fairly high in the bedroom and the vents are in the ceiling so my guess is that the hot air kills the A/C air before it even starts the journey down. I am looking at getting some solar shades installed on the outside of these windows and if my assumption is correct, I suppose that should help big time with my issue.
My question would be whether I am way off base in this thinking or if the shudder shades and the drapes should be enough to keep the sunlight/heat out despite how incredibly hot it actually gets near the windows? If they should be enough then perhaps the solar shield is a waste and I should push further on the HVAC efficiency.
Also any thoughts on the 120+ degree temperature? These are double paned windows that are about 15 years old and they have a slight tint on them. If I open the shades the air gets down to mid-90's but this of course makes the room sun filled and even harder to cool down.
This company has been recommended on TexAgs before: https://lonestarsolarscreens.com/ and planning to get a quote from them.