fireant911
Well-known member
We are entering the heating/cooling stage of our garage and I need some guidance. There are three areas that we would like to heat/cool as part of this project - these areas are marked on the attached SketchUp drawing. The Garage Upstairs space has an area of 400 square feet (40' X 10'). The Connector (which will be our new laundry room) is 118 square feet (10'-3" X 11'-5"). The Sunroom is 476 square feet (44'-2" X 10'-9").
Our initial thoughts were to go with a conventional HVAC system but the Garage Attic space would not be able to be maintained very well without getting fancy with multiple thermostats. After some digging, it looked as if a multi-zone mini-split unit may be the optimal choice. Initially, I was considering a tri-zone, but given that the connector is just a laundry room it does not need its own zone and can be included as part of the Sunroom; therefore, a dual-zone may be our best bet (my hypothesis).
We received a quote from the HVAC person for $6,300 for a conventional HVAC unit and a $9,000 cost for a mini-split (no details were given regarding the size or number of zones)... but that is too expensive for our budget. In looking at the availability of multi-zone mini-splits, it appears that the labor portion is more than the cost of the units themselves! I do not want to get into a discussion about purchasing mini-splits on line because I have already read through too many of those arguments and seem to go on and on. I definitely will get more quotes but the consensus is, from what I have read thus far, the installation is often priced very expensively.
We live in Northeast Alabama. After looking at various sources, a 9,000 BTU (Garage Upstairs) ad 18,000 BTU (Connector and Sunroom) should work (taking in consideration our hot Alabama summers and the number of windows in the Sunroom). Since Inverters are present on practically all of the mini-splits, slightly over-sizing the Sunroof/Connector zone to 24,000 BTU's may serve us better (the Garage Attic is very well insulated and includes a radiant barrier so, I think, the 9,000 BTU is correct). Now my question is: are my assumptions regarding a dual-zone mini-split are correct?
Thanks,
Daryl G
Our initial thoughts were to go with a conventional HVAC system but the Garage Attic space would not be able to be maintained very well without getting fancy with multiple thermostats. After some digging, it looked as if a multi-zone mini-split unit may be the optimal choice. Initially, I was considering a tri-zone, but given that the connector is just a laundry room it does not need its own zone and can be included as part of the Sunroom; therefore, a dual-zone may be our best bet (my hypothesis).
We received a quote from the HVAC person for $6,300 for a conventional HVAC unit and a $9,000 cost for a mini-split (no details were given regarding the size or number of zones)... but that is too expensive for our budget. In looking at the availability of multi-zone mini-splits, it appears that the labor portion is more than the cost of the units themselves! I do not want to get into a discussion about purchasing mini-splits on line because I have already read through too many of those arguments and seem to go on and on. I definitely will get more quotes but the consensus is, from what I have read thus far, the installation is often priced very expensively.
We live in Northeast Alabama. After looking at various sources, a 9,000 BTU (Garage Upstairs) ad 18,000 BTU (Connector and Sunroom) should work (taking in consideration our hot Alabama summers and the number of windows in the Sunroom). Since Inverters are present on practically all of the mini-splits, slightly over-sizing the Sunroof/Connector zone to 24,000 BTU's may serve us better (the Garage Attic is very well insulated and includes a radiant barrier so, I think, the 9,000 BTU is correct). Now my question is: are my assumptions regarding a dual-zone mini-split are correct?
Thanks,
Daryl G