Learninggal
Well-known member
- Joined
- Aug 8, 2021
- Messages
- 110
Sorry for the long post but I need advice on my planned upgrade this spring. Would appreciate some folks chiming in here
- NYC / Climate Zone 4, 2200sq feet home (approx 1500sq feet on 1st floor, 700sq feet on 2nd floor and finished basement not included in this total number but it's 600sq feet). I divided the staircase from 1st to 2nd floor equally in each floor's area. Leaky home but I have replaced all three entry doors and will be doing blown-in insulation in basement rim joists along with attic. All the stucco walls in the house will remain uninsulated and our double pane windows are older. We have ripped out the basement drywall so we can insulate and control humidity during the summer time
- Two systems single-zoned each. Basement/1st floor unit was upgraded from a 20 year old 100K BTU to Bosch 96% 20 SEER 60k BTU/3 ton a-coil and I’m trying to upgrade the attic unit that serves the 2nd floor. It’s currently also a 100k BTU unit
- In the winter time it's mostly the first floor unit that is operational all day long since heat moves up and the second floor unit comes on only during the coldest days (we typically like 70 during day, 66 at night). In the summertime I would think the units would be operational equally given we plan to use air conditioning with the new system (didn’t in the past as it unit would cycle too often and make us feel cold & hot)
- I think second floor will do fine with 30K BTU but those are pretty uncommon. I do see 1-2 of these models but wondering if I should go for the more common 40K BTU which come in a kit (furnace, a-coil, condenser). My other thought is to simply duplicate the 1st floor bosch unit exactly so I can exchange parts between the two units if one fails on the fly and don’t have to wait 3-4 days to order parts. If you folks have some models in mind and what SEER I should target, please suggest but I usually prefer higher upfront equipment costs and buying more efficient equipment and then recuperating on lower monthly cost because energy prices in New York City continue to go up aggressively
- I also need fresh air intake because I did some basic testing with an HVAC engineer which showed negative air pressure at home (tissue paper test through door/window crack while turning on all exhaust fans. No blower door test yet). The test showed negative pressure is greater on the 1st and 2nd floor and less in the basement. I suffer from pollen allergies for eight weeks of the year in April and May. Keep in mind that anything I purchase for this purpose will most likely only be operational for eight weeks of the year. I guess placing this unit in the basement is better versus second floor which could risk a water leak into the living area change filters can be a pain in attic though I do that for the current HVAC unit currently
- I already have a thermastor compact 70 model in the basement for dehumidification which supposedly can be equipped with a supply duct kit, return kit, external filter housing with merv 14 return kit to bring fresh filtered air in. Or perhaps, I can invest in a new ULTRA-AIR 70H or 120H. I have been told to create an independent return and connect the supply to the main supply duct of my current HVAC unit. I've also been told that either of these units are powerful enough to blow air through my HVAC system even if it is not turned on. Do you guys know if the thermastor unit has the ability to turn off fresh air and simply keep the dehumidification function turned on. Or do I have to manually disconnect the fresh air or close off some damper going to the outside wall
- Another alternate is the Field controls FAD-6 or the Fantech AEV 1000 but I guess the Thermastor wins given it has the dehumidifiation function
