What is Proper System Airflow

Ed Janowiak of ACCA gives a presentation about Manual S and what it means to have proper airflow. He gave this presentation at the second annual HVACR Training Symposium. You can learn more about the 2022 HVACR Training Symposium at hvacrschool.com/symposium/.
While Manual J deals with residential load calculations, Manual S deals with residential equipment selection. The equipment’s goal should be to maintain 70 degrees in the winter and 75 degrees in the summer (with a 62-degree WB). These are not Manual J goals; they are goals of the entire residential design series (Manual J, Manual S, and Manual D).
When consulting codes, remember that those are MINIMUM standards. However, some of these codes refer to Manual J and Manual S, including IECC.
The sensible heat ratio (SHR) dictates the airflow you’ll need (CFM per ton). The location and equipment manufacturer can affect the SHR, but they do not determine the CFM per ton alone. You must perform a load calculation to separate sensible BTUs from latent BTUs. Then, you divide your sensible BTUs by total BTUs to yield a ratio.
Your equipment performance data will determine blower performance. The manufacturer publishes these data sets, including heating performance data and expanded cooling performance data. (Expanded performance data can also tell you the WB, which is important in terms of meeting your design goals.) Follow that guidance for equipment selection (Manual S).
You may have heard of the 400 CFM per ton rule of thumb, but it’s about as accurate as “beer-can cold.” It’s just a rule of thumb, and your calculations will help you get a more precise CFM target for equipment selection.
It’s easier to determine capacity on a heating system, as all BTU/h are sensible. However, some cooling BTUs are latent, which complicates the capacity equation. Most manufacturers give you the total and sensible BTU/h, so you may have to do some math to determine the latent BTU/h for your SHR.
Sensible heat ratio (SHR) tells us how many BTU/h are sensible out of the total BTU/h. For example, if you have 10,000 BTU/h with an SHR of 0.75, that means that 7,500 BTU/h are sensible and 2,500 are latent. When your SHR is higher, your capacity increases. Both the system and the house have a sensible heat ratio.
When determining the CFM per ton with SHR, you can use your temperature difference (TD) in that equation. Manual S has a chart that tells you the TD for a given SHR. In that equation, you divide your sensible BTU/h by the product of 1.1 and your TD. You may get a number that’s far higher than 400 CFM per ton! Once you figure out your CFM, you can size your equipment based on airflow, capacity, and oversizing guidelines. Remove any equipment that is short on capacity from consideration.
Manual S has 3 “N” sections, which refer to standards. N1 deals with definitions and general requirements, N2 deals with sizing limits, and N3 deals with OEM verification.
N1 emphasizes the importance of using OEM performance data. Do NOT use the AHRI equipment performance data for sizing. While AHRI’s figures are good for getting a general idea, no data can compare to the manufacturer’s expanded performance data when it comes to accuracy.
One of the most important tables in Manual S is Table N2-1 in section N2-5. It tells you how to select air conditioners for single-speed, two-speed, and variable-speed equipment. The table also gives you the minimum and maximum sizing ranges for air-to-air systems as a ratio, typically with a 0.9 minimum (90%) to 1.15-1.3 (115-130%). The same table for heat pumps is in section N2-6 (Table N2-2).
When adding a dehumidifier, keep in mind that the sizing value is based on 85% of the latent cooling load. When making conversions to pints per hour, you take the latent BTU/h and divide it by 1,054.
Overall, you must remember that Manual S says to meet the sensible and latent heat gains, but don’t exceed the total gain by 15% (single speed), 20% (two speed), or 30% (variable speed).
On the heating side, you need to be able to counter the sensible losses in the heat. If a heating system cannot put out enough BTU/h to exceed those losses, you may need to add another source of supplemental heat and recalculate the BTU/h output to see if it exceeds the losses. If the BTU/h in sensible gain exceeds the losses, then the system will run satisfactorily for most of the winter.
To find the heating load CFM, you take the furnace sensible output (BTU/h) and divide it by the product of 1.1 and the temperature rise (instead of TD in cooling systems).
Ed also covers:
Design software programs
Interpolation
Default TD values for CFM approximations
Sizing for budget systems
House SHR and leaky homes
Sensible losses in the winter
Modern furnace sizing
Read all the tech tips, take the quizzes, and find our handy calculators at www.hvacrschool.com/.

Пікірлер: 17

  • @hkhsm359
    @hkhsm3592 жыл бұрын

    Great information and knowledge. Thanks for sharing

  • @realestateservicessaleshea99
    @realestateservicessaleshea992 жыл бұрын

    With the length of the video,my A D D was kicking in at various times but in general I've had "pre-covid" classes specifically designed for equipment selection. Thanks for the video! 🥃🥃🍺🍺🍺🍿👍🏻 Stay safe. Retired (werk'n) keyboard super tech. Wear your safety glasses.

  • @brianmcdermott1718
    @brianmcdermott17182 жыл бұрын

    Great info. And very educational.

  • @CHOMAHOMA
    @CHOMAHOMA2 жыл бұрын

    Thank you so much for this video. I need to get a hold of Ed for a couple of questions. I got above 62k BTUH of heating and 24.202 BTUH of cooling. I need to know how to compensate as much as possible for this difference. I got to do a lot of stuff in order to reduce heat loss. The house got a lot of windows. 23 panels in total. I need more info on Manual D. If you guys have the class on Manual D, I will appreciate it so much. He said he had more info on heating before jumping into Manual D. The work is for my own house and it is my first time doing it. Any help is highly and truly helpful and appreciated.

  • @johnnyprotalk3352
    @johnnyprotalk33522 жыл бұрын

    GREAT HELP

  • @lovintrump5755
    @lovintrump57552 жыл бұрын

    where are the links to manuals or address to download them ? Thanks really appreciate the hard work bringing us the vids

  • @smacleod69
    @smacleod692 жыл бұрын

    When a company doesn't do a load calculation, How do they know what the sensible and latent heat ratios of the evap coil is? and if the a/c will do the job. I've tried to explain this to my fellow techs and people I work with how important this info is and they don't really care about that stuff or even want to know.

  • @crunch9876

    @crunch9876

    2 жыл бұрын

    I’m assuming your doing residential… in which case it’s not that important and your competing with people who don’t do that calls either

  • @smacleod69

    @smacleod69

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@crunch9876 Whats not important? Doing load calculation or knowing sensible and latent heat? Some companies have mixed and matched coils with outdoor units. which screws up equipment and lucky if it even cools right.

  • @shawn2789

    @shawn2789

    2 жыл бұрын

    @@smacleod69 that's common. Upsizing the coil a half ton is called a high efficiency coil. Even air Handler listed for 3 tons can have a 3.5 ton evap coil. But I agree the load calc are important and I struggle to get people to understand that. I do residential and I see units get ripped out regularly because they are under sized. You can swap matching units but I wouldn't recommend it in my area. Sometimes swapping them out gives you an oversized unit if theyve had weatherization upgrades. We also do a lot of ERVs so the unit needs to be sized to accommodate that. Or you'll screw yourself.

  • @waynecostanza2280
    @waynecostanza22802 жыл бұрын

    interpolation is not averaging, 27700-26800= 900. 900/ 10degrees = 90btu per degrees , so 86 would be 26890, 87 would be 26980, 88 would be 27070, 89 would be 27160 and 90 would be 27250. And so on. That is interpolating. This is assuming a linear scale between 85 and 95 degrees. Exponential interpolation would follow the logarithmic spacing. Averaging worked because you were splitting the delta in half. If you wanted to know what it would be at 93 you cannot average.

  • @edwardzachary1426
    @edwardzachary14262 жыл бұрын

    So did he get his new job for Acca during lunch? This one he doesn’t have it and the manual D one he does?

  • @edwardjanowiak

    @edwardjanowiak

    2 жыл бұрын

    Yes, the feedback was so good from the class they called me during lunch and made me an offer I could not refuse :-o

  • @realestateservicessaleshea99
    @realestateservicessaleshea992 жыл бұрын

    2 hours I'll have to revisit!🤣

  • @jericosha2842

    @jericosha2842

    2 жыл бұрын

    Watch later list and listen between calls

  • @moonlightacmaintenance3232
    @moonlightacmaintenance32322 жыл бұрын

    Very important information, but these videos are getting hard to sit through.

  • @lovintrump5755
    @lovintrump57552 жыл бұрын

    NM lol im blind