Chronology Current Month Current Thread Current Date
[Year List] [Month List (current year)] [Date Index] [Thread Index] [Thread Prev] [Thread Next] [Date Prev] [Date Next]

Re: [Phys-l] Air Conditioner Sizing (was Another Try)



Dear Mike,

I am from NW Ohio, so I remember it a bit. I am now in AZ and late summer is hot and fairly humid. Two years ago I replaced our 20 year old AC and swamp cooler with the best ( highest SEER rating) I could get. The unit has two compressors. The low speed pulls about 1600 Watts. The air conditioning part of my electric bill dropped from almost $200 to less than $50 per month. But the thing was pricey. I figure over the life of the unit, that at current power prices, the savings with the higher SEER just balanced the couple thousand more it cost.

ENJOY
Roger Haar

Edmiston, Mike wrote:
Brian Whatcott makes a very good point that HVAC units in the USA are
often meausured in tons. However, his estimate of a 5-ton AC unit for a
2000 sq ft home seems high to me.

I am cooling about 3000 sq ft in northwest Ohio with less than 2 tons.
My house is an old Victorian house with walls that are three bricks
thick, so it is fairly well insulated, and also has a lot of thermal
mass. Since it has hot water heat, there is no duct work, so I am using
window AC units which fortunately have gotten much quieter, more
efficient, and lighter. I have four 6000-BTU units. At 12,000 BTU per
ton, that means I have exactly 2 tons. However, I only run two units
(one upstairs and one downstairs) unless the temperature gets over 85 F
oustide. Today it is about 90 F and quite humid, so I have all four
running.

If I were to install central air, which I have considered doing, I think
I would only install a 2-ton unit; not a 5-ton unit. I think AC is
often oversized, and then it cycles on and off. The problem with that
is poor dehumidification, which is important in Ohio. I get good
humidity control by running the required number of units continuously.
If one of the units begins to cycle (because the temperature setting has
been reached), I just turn it completely off.

I'd like to have a two-stage central air system constructed with two
one-ton units. I would run one continuously and bring on the second as
needed.

The science building at Bluffton University just had its 28-year-old AC
unit replaced. A 25-ton compressor was replaced with a two-stage unit
consisting of a 10-ton compressor and a 15-ton compressor. For most of
the summer we have been running the 10-ton only and continuously. It is
cooling fine and keeps the humidity much lower than when we ran the
previous 25-ton that cycled on and off. Only on a few days when the
outside temp went above 95 F did the 15-ton stage kick in. We're saving
electricity and keeping drier with the two-stage unit.


Michael D. Edmiston, Ph.D.
Professor of Chemistry and Physics
Bluffton University
Bluffton, OH 45817
(419)-358-3270
edmiston@bluffton.edu
_______________________________________________
Forum for Physics Educators
Phys-l@carnot.physics.buffalo.edu
https://carnot.physics.buffalo.edu/mailman/listinfo/phys-l