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Mini Split recomendation

99Mike

Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2006
Messages
11
Location
Fayetteville, NC
Currently building a 24X28X10 stick built detached garage in Fayetteville, NC. Temps reach the mid 90s in the summer and mid 40s in the winter although it occasionally goes above 100 and below 32F. It will have a attic which will be used for storage and will not be heated/cooled at this time. The walls will be insulated with R15 and the ceiling with at least R30. The 16X8 door will be insulated as well. It will have one entry door and 2 windows. What size and make Mini Split would you recommend?

Thanks,
Mike
 
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pcmeiners

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Aug 13, 2009
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In the only town in Pennsylvania, Bloomsburg.
Mike, minisplit sizing has been discussed numerous times before, please read through these links, then ask questions.....





 

PCMusicGuy

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Joined
Feb 15, 2009
Messages
851
Location
Houston, TX
Brand is a very hard thing to recommend. All of them are made in either Japan, Korea, or China at various different price points and warranties. If you are doing it all yourself, spend some time doing some searching what might be best for you. In what I've seen over the years, a lot of people will use Mr. Cool or Pioneer. If you are going to get someone to do it, just find someone you can trust and use whatever they recommend. Almost all of the them are difficult to get parts for. The large wheel that moves the air is probably the biggest part that will need maintenance (i.e. cleaning) so it may be worth finding one where that is easily removable.

I would go with at least an 18k unit for your size. You'll get the benefit of a stronger system, but generally, the higher BTU output you get, you can also find a higher SEER number which means it is more efficient. Also, I'd recommend keeping your line set on the shorter side as that also helps with efficiency.
 

thammel

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Oct 3, 2005
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2,237
Location
Maryland
A 15-18K BTU unit would be plenty. Best is probably Mitsubishi Mr Slim units. Not cheap.
 
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pcmeiners

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Aug 13, 2009
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7,842
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In the only town in Pennsylvania, Bloomsburg.
First for a well insulated garage 12k is ample especially in NC. Reads the threads I linked

" but generally, the higher BTU output you get, you can also find a higher SEER number which means it is more efficient.

Wrong, just the opposite, the lower the Btu capacity minisplit units the higher the SEER and HSPF efficiencies can be.

example.....

 

daveindenver

Member
Joined
May 12, 2018
Messages
22
Currently building a 24X28X10 stick built detached garage in Fayetteville, NC. Temps reach the mid 90s in the summer and mid 40s in the winter although it occasionally goes above 100 and below 32F. It will have a attic which will be used for storage and will not be heated/cooled at this time. The walls will be insulated with R15 and the ceiling with at least R30. The 16X8 door will be insulated as well. It will have one entry door and 2 windows. What size and make Mini Split would you recommend?

Thanks,
Mike
Indirectly related, I am curious how you are spanning the 24' width to support the ceiling and insulation, especially since not using trusses? You mentioned R15 walls - are you doing 10' walls with 2x4? Have you already started the build?
 
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9

99Mike

Member
Joined
Nov 19, 2006
Messages
11
Location
Fayetteville, NC
Indirectly related, I am curious how you are spanning the 24' width to support the ceiling and insulation, especially since not using trusses? You mentioned R15 walls - are you doing 10' walls with 2x4? Have you already started the build?
The footers are poured and the bricklayer is doing the foundation as we speak. The walls are going to be 10 foot or so. The foundation will be 2 foot with 93 inch 2x4s for the additional 8 feet to match the house. I am doing attic trusses to span the 24 feet. This will give me an additional room over the garage.
 

daveindenver

Member
Joined
May 12, 2018
Messages
22
The footers are poured and the bricklayer is doing the foundation as we speak. The walls are going to be 10 foot or so. The foundation will be 2 foot with 93 inch 2x4s for the additional 8 feet to match the house. I am doing attic trusses to span the 24 feet. This will give me an additional room over the garage.
Nice, sounds good. When you said stick-built, I thought you meant without trusses.
 
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