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| Forums > Marijuana Growing > Growroom Designs & Equipment > Calculating The Size of a Air Conditioner | ||
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full time daddy
Join Date: Jul 2004
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Calculating The Size of a Air Conditioner
OK guys so this come's up as or in a thread just about every other day....
with this formula a room would be able to get in the 70-72 deg range even when it's 100+ but yet still maintain humidity at night time with proper air movement Calculating Heat Load Heat is measured in either BTU or Kilowatts. 1KW is equivalent to 3500BTUs. The heat load depends on a number of factor's 1.The floor area of the room 2.The heat generated by equipment 3 the heat from lighting 4.The number of room occupants 5.The ambient temp ( your room's starting temp ) this will be added asap im still playing with the #'s 1.Floor Area of Room Room Area BTU = L x W x 40 ( H = 8foot + 5btu per foot after that) If you have a wall that is facing the sun add in for the extra heat Sun facing wall BTU = L x H x 40 2.Equipment This is trickier to calculate than you might think. The wattage on equipment is the maximum power consumption rating, the actual power consumed may be less. However it is safer to overestimate the wattage than underestimate it. Equipment BTU = Total wattage for equipment x 3.5 Ballast in room BTU = ballast wattage/2 x 3.5 3.Lighting Lighting BTU = Total wattage for all lighting x 4 Air cooled hood BTU = wattage x 4 / 2 @ 400= 200-250 cfm 600= 250-300 cfm 1k = 300-350 cfm ^ is just a guide cfm per hood will be on your ducting/SP.... 4.Occupants even being that im only there for 2 or so of the 12 hrs i like it to be able to handle the extra sweat when i smoke one. Total Occupant BTU = Number of occupants x 400 Total Cooling Required Add all the BTUs together. Total Heat Load = Room Area BTU + Total Occupant BTU + Equipment BTU + Lighting BTU If your using a portable a/c Total Heat Load BTU x 2 ^this has been from threads on this site i dont have any real experince with portable a/c's other then one and it was not in a growroom but if you plan on getting one id think about one thats bigger then you thought about ![]() sample so if we have a 3 x 3 room with 1k and 200 watt's in fan's/pump's for room we need 360 btu for fan we need 700 btu 1k = 4000btu ballast in the room = 1500 btu we would need a/c that is 6560 btu i would round up to the next size 7kbtu air exchange aka intake/exhaust complete air exchange every 4-5 minutes is average for a grow room/greenhouse (co2 control).... for heat control (no a/c) i like to use 2.5 minutes {1M is best imo} m=air exchange in min's l x w x h = cf / m = cfm lets use are room from above as a sample 3 x 3 x 8 = 72 /2.5 = 28.8 (30) highend turn over = 72cfm lowend turn over = 30cfm now for the light 1k = 300-350cfm exhaust system and air-cooled hood should be separated but most ppl cant/dont ( it's spendy) so add them together if your using 1 fan for both the fan size we need is 330-422 remember you have duct loss (SP) in the sample room i would use a 440 cfm fan SEER & EER ratings NO they are not the same..... EER, or the Energy Efficient Ratio, is a measure of how efficiently a cooling system will operate when the outdoor temperature is at a specific level - usually 95°F. EER is calculated as a simple ratio of BTU's to the amount of power a unit consumes in watts. Here is an example using an air conditioner with 12,000 BTU's and consuming 1500 watts of power: EER = BTU's / Watts 12,000 / 1500 = 8 EER = 8 While it is true that the higher the EER and BTU's, the more efficient the cooling system, many make the mistake of purchasing oversized air conditioners and ignoring EER ratings. The following is an example of an air conditioner with 12,000 BTU's and 1200 watts: 12,000 / 1200 = 10 EER =10 This would mean that this second unit can produce the same amount of cooling but more energy efficiently. Therefore, to save money on your monthly electric bill, choose a cooling system by getting an appropriately sized unit with a high EER. SEER(seasonal energy efficiency ratio) measures how efficiently a residential central cooling system (air conditioner or heat pump) will operate over an entire cooling season, as opposed to a single outdoor temperature. As with EER, a higher SEER reflects a more efficient cooling system. SEER is calculated based on the total amount of cooling (in Btu) the system will provide over the entire season divided by the total number of watt-hours it will consume: SEER = seasonal Btu of cooling / seasonal watt-hours used
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[00420]positive side [tokinsmokin] WOW how the hell do u know this [00420] [tokinsmokin]ur blowing my mind here dude this is some fuckin technical shit ur tellin me [00420] done?> [tokinsmokin]alright ur a genius [tokinsmokin]u kind of scare me here man, u answer pretty much every question i've had so far and not only answer it but answer it with the correct answer Last edited by 00420; 08-17-2008 at 05:53 PM.. |
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13 members found this post helpful. |
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#2 | |
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Banned
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Downtown
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Nice thread!
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natural medicator
Join Date: Nov 2007
Posts: 2,128
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another vote for stickyifiying this
thanks 00420!
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600w organic grow |
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#4 |
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Guest
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Just curious, where'd you get the numbers from?
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#5 |
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Member
Join Date: Feb 2008
Posts: 286
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I go with 5000 BTU's per 1W of light.
Last edited by G33k Speak; 07-24-2008 at 11:10 PM.. Reason: seems to make better sense with the inclusion of 'BTU' |
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1 members found this post helpful. |
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Suburban Hillbilly Grower
Join Date: Jul 2006
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Thank for the info!
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full time daddy
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 3,148
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Quote:
being that you brought up efficiency im going to add how EER ratings are calculated Quote:
10 yr's researching indoor growing on google potparty,FirstTracks glad you like it
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[00420]positive side [tokinsmokin] WOW how the hell do u know this [00420] [tokinsmokin]ur blowing my mind here dude this is some fuckin technical shit ur tellin me [00420] done?> [tokinsmokin]alright ur a genius [tokinsmokin]u kind of scare me here man, u answer pretty much every question i've had so far and not only answer it but answer it with the correct answer Last edited by 00420; 07-25-2008 at 12:36 AM.. |
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Guest
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Thats what i like to hear, "experience".
Somebody sticky this already!! |
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Banned
Join Date: Oct 2006
Location: Downtown
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I realize the BTU's put out by air-cooled lights can vary widely depending on how it's ducted, how fast the air is flowing, whether the ducting is insulated, how well the reflector is designed, and so on... but anyone have a ballpark figure / rough guesstimate on how it compares to non-air-cooled? Or perhaps a "BTU rule of thumb" for air-cooled lights? |
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#10 | |
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full time daddy
Join Date: Jul 2004
Posts: 3,148
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Quote:
and all show you why twice i run 3 flowering rooms....... 2 are 8 k each 8 x 5000btu = 40,000 btu in my 2 growroom i use 1 25,000 btu a/c eachroom witch is 50,000 btu for 16,000k 40k btu is no where near what i need, 25kbtu is plenty they run 24/7 when lights are on, then about 6hrs at night ( it keeps hum down ) and on hot days ( 110+) i have to shut a lamp or 2 off. but its better the running a dehu now in my 2 k flowering room 2 x 5kbtu =10,000btu i run aircooled hood but the size of the room is 7.5x8x9 & one wall is in the sun 2/3rds of the day and i need 12,000 btu i had a 10,000 in there at first and it did not keep it under 80 if i was not running aircooled hoods i would need a 15/18kbtu unit so as you can see my bigger rooms need less then 5000 btu per light but my 2k room needs more...
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[00420]positive side [tokinsmokin] WOW how the hell do u know this [00420] [tokinsmokin]ur blowing my mind here dude this is some fuckin technical shit ur tellin me [00420] done?> [tokinsmokin]alright ur a genius [tokinsmokin]u kind of scare me here man, u answer pretty much every question i've had so far and not only answer it but answer it with the correct answer Last edited by 00420; 07-25-2008 at 08:03 PM.. |
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2 members found this post helpful. |
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