brianpgriset
Well-known member
I am ready to purchase a conventional split system for my shop building. Houston TX area. 30 x 60 x 14 eaves with 3/12 pitch. Wood frame, slab on grade building with steel PBR panel exterior. 3" closed cell foam on roof deck, 2" wall. I then finished out the stud bays with R13 fiberglass both roof and walls. The building uses 2x4 lath between the studs and steel exterior and the foam fills the void between the stud and steel so there is very little thermal bridging. 3 panel doors, all R18 insulated. No Windows. Very tightly sealed.
Everyone keeps telling me I need 3 tons minimum. But right now I just have a 70 pint dehumidifier in there and that alone actually makes it pretty decent.
I used the loadcalc.net calculator for load sizing. It doesn't have options for my construction type so I used assumed stucco/siding R13 with R6 foam board as a best approximation. I then entered in the wall and door surface areas. When I set outside temp to 95 and inside to 70 I'm getting only about 12kbtu heat load. Of that about 9000 is the doors and only about 2000 is the gain from walls. Lighting would add another 1600btu.
This would suggest I could cool the space with a very small system. I understand there are some varying loads like opening the doors, etc but I don't plan to pull hot cars in very often.
From what I see it's very common to oversize. I wanted to buy a 2 ton heat pump. Is this reasonable? Are my load calc numbers reasonable?
I figure, using the loadcalc numbers it'll take about 14000btu to keep the building at 70 with the lights on in the hotest days of the year. That would leave me 10000btu of spare capacity for dropping temps from high, appliances, etc.
I'd probably rather underside than oversize. But I'm curious if anyone else has a very very tight building similar to this.
Because the building is so tight I'd probably rather underside than oversize.
Everyone keeps telling me I need 3 tons minimum. But right now I just have a 70 pint dehumidifier in there and that alone actually makes it pretty decent.
I used the loadcalc.net calculator for load sizing. It doesn't have options for my construction type so I used assumed stucco/siding R13 with R6 foam board as a best approximation. I then entered in the wall and door surface areas. When I set outside temp to 95 and inside to 70 I'm getting only about 12kbtu heat load. Of that about 9000 is the doors and only about 2000 is the gain from walls. Lighting would add another 1600btu.
This would suggest I could cool the space with a very small system. I understand there are some varying loads like opening the doors, etc but I don't plan to pull hot cars in very often.
From what I see it's very common to oversize. I wanted to buy a 2 ton heat pump. Is this reasonable? Are my load calc numbers reasonable?
I figure, using the loadcalc numbers it'll take about 14000btu to keep the building at 70 with the lights on in the hotest days of the year. That would leave me 10000btu of spare capacity for dropping temps from high, appliances, etc.
I'd probably rather underside than oversize. But I'm curious if anyone else has a very very tight building similar to this.
Because the building is so tight I'd probably rather underside than oversize.