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I really blew it!

thammel

Well-known member
Joined
Oct 3, 2005
Messages
2,236
Location
Maryland
My garage is 32x28 with 12' ceilings and a 32 x 12 x 7 man cave attic room above - with an open staircase to the attic. This is the problem area.

The place is very well insulated - R19 in all walls and r30+ in the ceilings.

I put in 2 mini splits (Mitsubishi) - an 18k in the garage and a 9k in the attic. This is where I blew it. The 9k simply can't keep up in the summer when all the cool air goes down the stairway and the warmer air from below comes up the stairway.

I'm thinking of biting the bullet and replacing the 9k with either an 18 or 24 k unit. Can any of you offer any suggestions? Any reason to not go with the 24K one?

Thanks,
Tom
 
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Streetbu

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Joined
Jan 7, 2014
Messages
3,082
Location
Central NY
Why not swap the position of the the two current mini spits. Since cold air drops and all.... just a thought
 

Texsun

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Joined
Mar 23, 2012
Messages
148
I use one of these strip doors in the stair way between my garage and upstairs game room, still looks good after 14 years and keeps the AC where it belongs.

1.jpg
 

soob

Well-known member
Joined
Jul 11, 2011
Messages
551
Man, that's wimpy. Don't replace the 9k, though, just put in another unit next to it.
 
OP
T

thammel

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Joined
Oct 3, 2005
Messages
2,236
Location
Maryland
A door is an obvious possible solution but not easy to install. There is only a half wall up top and a window which makes placing a door up there not possible. I had tacked up plastic sheeting last summer which didn't seem to help all that much. And no, I don't keep the upstairs cooler than the garage.

I have a half wall over the bottom half of the stairway also so a door isn't really feasible there either. The reason for the half walls is to make it a lot easier to move items up and down between floors.

and yep, I though about adding another unit but that does seem to get crazy....more things to fail, but then more redundancy is good when considering single point failures and reliability analysis... (the engineer in me speaking).

Oh well... lesson learned.

Tom
 
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bobbyjean

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Joined
Aug 25, 2017
Messages
319
Location
hudson valley n.y.
hmmm...hot air rise's......how bout ...well it isn't efficient but keeping the lower garage setpoint dropped way down will eat the load up some..then add a dehumidfier of some sort...it may help
 

drs3317

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 31, 2016
Messages
124
Location
Western Maryland
If the half wall is for ease of moving large items up or down, why not add removable or sliding shutters? Even the door could be made with a removable jamb. Design it to your liking and it could add style to the room. Wood shutters or even a heavy insulated curtain.
I think there would be many ways to do this. You could even make removable insulated panels to set on the half wall.
 

Trey T

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Joined
Aug 3, 2011
Messages
3,749
Location
Houston, TX
There are two main things to consider when we heat/cool our space, capacity and air distribution.

W/o doing some math, I can't say if the units installed has the capacity for the spaces. However, I can guess in most cases for mini-splits, they have an inherit issue with air distribution, which I believe many people do not think about during the planning phase. The issue can be compounded when the two system is not ran in tandem to provide adequate capacity. Ultimately, you have three choices:

1. go back to planning phase and figure out the issue is either capacity or air distribution
2. put a door and/or add ceiling fans
3. play the guessing game of upgrading the units to higher capacity
 
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ripperd

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Joined
Jul 2, 2014
Messages
2,041
Location
Twin Cities, MN
It is not just the hot air rising that is the problem. Even though you have R30 in the ceiling, there is still some heat gain through the ceiling, especailly since the roof is so much warmer when heated by the sun than the walls. So you may find that just adding a door doesn't make quite as large of a difference as one would hope.
 

yeldogt

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 2, 2012
Messages
18,184
I have done 1k sf per ton w/ foam.

If the upstairs is not cooling with the downstairs units operating -- you have a heat gain problem or leaking ......... or the unit is not working correctly
 

justinjoyal

Well-known member
Joined
Apr 30, 2015
Messages
888
Location
Quebec
9kbtu should easily take care of a 380 sq ft space with the insulation you have, I’m sure a door would fix your problem. (Unless there are other unmentionned issues.)
 

mtref

New member
Joined
Nov 11, 2017
Messages
2
Instead of a door, put up a quilt or blanket to block the air movement. We did that in our house to keep the heat downstairs instead of going up the stairs to a spare room above the garage. Now the upstairs stays around 40 degrees while downstairs it is 66 degrees. you can then remove it when you aren't heating.
 
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