When growing up, did anyone ever put a wet sheet across an open window to cool a room?

I have seen this done.
BQ: do you know of other ways before air conditioning?

sophieb2014-03-01T19:42:43Z

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That didn't happen for me but I was talking to someone from India a few years ago and they said they hang something wet and then have the fan hit it and it cools the room. So I started hand washing towels and undies and hanging them between the bathroom and living room on hot days and it does cut down on ac time and keeps my bill down.

There are still homes here in Florida that have no air conditioning. People sit on their porch with a cold drink in hand.

Back home we had a floor fan from my dad's office sitting in the center of the hallway and it was supposed to circulate the air (not cool anything). I wonder if I could use your idea on my car windows in summer

Handyman2014-03-02T05:56:58Z

We didn't have A/C in our house when I was growing up, but the house always seemed cool. My stepdad always had a de-humidifier going in the family rooms, and that took a lot of moisture out of the air. There were lots and lots of shade trees surrounding our house. Sometimes you'd put a small fan in your bedroom window at night and when that fan caught a small breeze, it was lovely. But I sure don't remember the wet sheet trick.

My second husband and I never had A/C in our first, rather smallish house, but there was a HUGE black walnut tree in the front yard, the branches of which entirely covered the house. It had to make a good 20Β° difference on a hot day. My daughter called me a couple of months ago to tell me that tree was gone now. She could hardly believe it - it was a very old tree (took two people to put their arms around the trunk) and must have cost a fortune to have removed, though, of course, the wood itself would have been valuable. Can't imagine why they did it - sure, it made a mess in the lawn with its once every other year walnuts and its tiny, impossible to rake leaves - but it was a beautiful tree. Perhaps it had died or had some disease. She said its being gone changed the look of the whole street, and I'm sure it did!

β™₯β™₯β™₯𝓨𝓸𝓾 𝓖𝓸 𝓖𝓲𝓻𝓡 β™₯β™₯β™₯2014-03-01T19:50:05Z

Putting a wet towel over you or just be wet and stand in from of the fan.
Some ice cubes all over ya with the fan blowing on you.
BQ-Actually I learn to keep it dark in the room with the windows and blinds close with the fan on the floor can keep it cool in a room too.

Anonymous2014-03-01T16:54:14Z

Before air conditioning people sweated. For driving they sat on a Kool-Kushion, and that helped a lot to keep the shirt dry. I used to carry a Kool-Kushion to school but for some reason nobody else ever did that.

Air conditioning used to be a huge machine. To cool a movie theater for 500 people took a water shower as big as a house. Houses were cooled by evaporative coolers, and that was ok if the humidity was low. They even made them for cars.

https://www.google.com/search?site=&tbm=isch&source=hp&biw=1024&bih=750&q=swamp+cooler

Dick2014-03-02T00:02:11Z

I can remember sleeping under a damp sheet in extreme high temperatures. Never saw a wet sheet over a window. My mother used to put a bowl of ice cubes in front of an electric fan. Don't remember if that did any good or not. I built a mist system to cool my patio, in summer. Just drilled tiny #80 holes in copper pipe and hooked it up to the garden hose. Worked up to 108F in low humidity.

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