If you want it to be colder, do you turn the air conditioner up or down?

The modern thermostat is a closed-loop controller. You tell the thermostat what the set point temperature is. This is the temperature you want the room to be. As an example, if you set the set point temperature to 72 °F, the thermostat will actively control the air conditioner (by turning it on off on off on off…) so that the temperature is at (or around) 72 °F.

How does it actually do that?

The air conditioner is always measuring the actual air temperature, and comparing it to the set point temperature. This is an oversimplification, but if the actual air temperature is greater than the set point temperature, it applies power to the AC compressor and it blows out cold air. If the actual air temperature is lower than the set point temperature, it turns off the AC compressor and it does not blow cold air. (In reality there is a non-zero “bandwidth” around the set point temperature. As an example, if the set point temperature to 72 °F and the bandwidth is 2 °F, the compressor will kick on when the temperature is greater than 73 °F and kick off when the temperature is less than 71 °F.)

As some others have said, “turning up” the air conditioner can have two meanings:

  1. Increasing the set point temperature (e.g. from 72 °F to 73 °F) thus making the room slightly warmer.

  2. Increasing the power consumption of the air conditioner. This is achieved by decreasing the set point temperature (e.g. from 72 °F to 71 °F) thus making the room slightly colder.

Therefore, when someone says they want you to “turn up” the air conditioner, you should ask them if the want the room warmer or colder.

This is only a problem if you spell it “blow dry”. Spell it “blow-dry” and “blow-dried” becomes completely unproblematic.

This comes up in conversations at my house also. I clicked None of the Above. :slight_smile:

Here’s a loosely related question: When you want to turn on the A/C, or a light, by changing the position of an ordinary wall switch, do you ‘Open’ the switch or ‘Close’ it? (Assume your language lacks the terms ‘turn on’ and ‘turn off.’)
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I’m glad I’m not the only one; first time my parents went away and left me at home for a few days by myself, the fridge started freezing things and I pretty near had a breakdown trying to work out which way I needed to turn the dial…

1 means minimum amount of refrigeration. If you turn it to 10, you’ll usually find that it eventually begins to freeze things left on the top shelf of the refrigerator.

Oh, East is East, and West is West, and never the twain shall meet,
Till Earth and Sky stand presently at God’s great Judgment seat;
But there is neither East nor West, Border, nor Breed, nor Birth,
When two strong men stand face to face, though they come from the ends of the earth!

On the temperature thing, I have to disagree with anyone thinking up is down and down is up

What color is the sky in your world?

You want it colder, Turn it Down.

While that’s certainly consistent, the reason this is a question at all is the disconnect between temperature and whether the machine is working harder. With a furnace, temp and work line up but not with an a/c. Like Ruken, I try to avoid the conflict by just saying “make it colder!”.

Two I would deal with are down (digital displays) and one up (knob labeled “cooler/1-8”).

Close the switch
If you OPEN it you OPEN the contacts and disconnect the current from the device you want on.

Around here we say “Make more cold” / “Make less cold” for AC.

This is how I do it. I can’t reconcile the up/down difference in my own brain, so I break it down into this logical unit.

That’s because my mother wasn’t around. After she left I was wondering why the saucisson and chorizo were trying to freeze, until I realized she’d turned the fridge to the coolest setting. When you’re in the North Pole, the only possible surface direction is South.

This is how I would think of it, though ACs get “cranked up” more than “turned up” to make it cooler.

In one of my cars, a very old BMW, the air vents have a wheel control to open or close them, with the positions marked with a vertical line at the top and an O at the bottom.

It turns out the vertical line is like a “1” for on (integer as Boolean, like in assembly or C programming languages) and the 0 is for off. But since it’s an air vent, my wife always gets it backwards, thinking they’re symbols for an open flue (O) and a sealed one (|).

Then there was the time a chicken was following a series of arrows drawn on the ground the wrong way because they thought they were footprints leading in the direction a bird was walking…

I wouldn’t say to open or to close the lights in English, but in fact, the verbs for switching on/off electric lights in Chinese are exactly that: “opening” a switch enables a mechanism on, “closing” is to disable it. The fact that it is enabled by means of closing an electrical circuit loop is an implementation detail.