Commendatore
Well-known member
Here's my situation. My house is a typical suburban box arrangement with a finished third floor attic. A 2 ton AC unit serves the first story, and a 3.5 ton (single zone) unit serves the second-story (including a bonus room above the garage) and 3rd story.
I'm now working from home full-time and moved my office up to the 3rd floor. its still April, but its already hot up here. With the thermostat on the 2nd floor, the 3rd floor hardly sees any cooling in moderate weather.
The 3rd floor is 300 square feet (clipped attic ceiling) plus about 60 square feet of stairwell. There is one window facing northeast.
My first thought was to size down, since this window unit is going to supplement the central air, BUT there is more to the story.
In a moderate summer, the central air is barely adequate on the second-story. During a scorcher, it can't keep up. In a perfect world it would be time for a new dual zone system, but that is not in the budget. I'm hoping that by reducing the heat load with a 3rd floor window unit the second floor will also be a lot more comfortable.
I see lots of affordable window units out there that are 6,000 or 8,000 BTUs. Quick rule of thumb numbers say I need 7200 BTUs, so should I bump that up or down?
I'm now working from home full-time and moved my office up to the 3rd floor. its still April, but its already hot up here. With the thermostat on the 2nd floor, the 3rd floor hardly sees any cooling in moderate weather.
The 3rd floor is 300 square feet (clipped attic ceiling) plus about 60 square feet of stairwell. There is one window facing northeast.
My first thought was to size down, since this window unit is going to supplement the central air, BUT there is more to the story.
In a moderate summer, the central air is barely adequate on the second-story. During a scorcher, it can't keep up. In a perfect world it would be time for a new dual zone system, but that is not in the budget. I'm hoping that by reducing the heat load with a 3rd floor window unit the second floor will also be a lot more comfortable.
I see lots of affordable window units out there that are 6,000 or 8,000 BTUs. Quick rule of thumb numbers say I need 7200 BTUs, so should I bump that up or down?