I have designed a 4920 sf house in Dallas with a sealed crawl space. The crawl space walls are concrete and a have 2x10 floor joist system on top of it. The crawl space walls are insulated with 1” Polyiso and the rim joist is insulated with 5.5 open cell foam. The walls above are R23 BIBs in cavity + R5 exterior rigid foam over sheathing, and 5.5 open cell foam on the floor truss rim. The attic is ventilated with R50 BIF. The builder in previous houses has gotten air leakage of ≤1ACH50, so we know he does a good job there. The HVAC contractor doing the MJ says that he needs to do a “SEMI-TIGHT” construction because of the crawl space AND semi-tight fireplace installation when we are installing 2 sealed combustion fireplaces. I say the construction and fireplace should be label tight. It all boils down to add an additional 1 ton of AC form 5 to 6. I know is not much of an issue for most folks, but when I’m trying to design maximum efficiency (HERS 55), 1 ton extra is a lot, specially when we know all MJ are 15%-25% oversized from the get go. Any thoughts here? Thank you.

 

Views: 889

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

All equipment can be tested for capacity once it's installed, testing removes all opinions and produces facts.

With such a low cooling load I question if oversized 2 stage units are even worth the investment, you may be better off just getting the smaller single stage units. Consider the outputs of the units at the design temperature, rated tonnage is typically done for 95 degree outside conditions, output decreases as temperature goes up.

Also consider what happens if you do happen to slightly undersize? Your house might be slightly warmer than the thermostat setting on design days for a few hours in the afternoon. This of course will be accompanied by full power AC running so there will be a cool draft blowing from the AC vents which can make a room feel cooler than the number on the thermostat. It's not the end of the world if you are slightly undersized.

Manual J does NOT account for thermal storage in your house, which could very well be enough to get through the peak temps of the day. Have you ever noticed a well insulated building is almost always cooler than the outside on a hot afternoon, even when there is no A/C running? That's thermal storage in action. When you did Manual J did you account for appliance/lighting loads that could simply be turned off when it's hot outside? Are there other Manual J variables that could be altered on the hot afternoon to keep temps down in your house?

A lot of contractors wrongly think multi stage provides justification to oversize. Even if the duct work is designed to handle the extra airflow (usually not) this is unfortunate misorientation. A catastrophic misunderstanding of how to deliver comfort and efficiency.

Oversizing removes the value added of 2 stage units, which is the ability to run without satisfying. Initially this may be counterintuitive, but give it some thought. The biggest advantage is having a system that doesn't shut off when the house is experiencing load. This provides much better latent control and much more even distribution to areas that might otherwise be imbalanced. Multi stage provides this advantage if properly sized. It does not if oversized.

If we reorient thinking, explain that hvac doesn't heat or cool, it replaces heat or cool. The best, most efficient, most comfortable way to do this is matching loss. Think about hvac as maintaining temperature rather than "heating up" or "cooling down," and the way people think about how to accomplish home performance changes.

If you hear multi stage being used as justification for oversizing, your antenna should go up. Ask whose interests the justifier is concerned about, certainly its not the homeowners.

RSS

Home Energy Pros

Home Energy Pros was founded by the developers of Home Energy Saver Pro (sponsored by the U.S. Department of Energy, under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act) and brought to you in partnership with Home Energy magazine.

Latest Activity

Judi Lyall joined allen p tanner's group
Thumbnail

Energy Auditing Equipment for Sale, Trade or to Purchase

Discuss the pros and cons of the equipment you are interested in prior to purchase. Post equipment…See More
9 hours ago
Judi Lyall replied to David Starrett's discussion I am looking for a good IR camera in the group Energy Auditing Equipment for Sale, Trade or to Purchase
"Hi there I am selling my equipment and have a great Fluke TIR for sale for 3600.00    If…"
9 hours ago
William H Nickerson commented on Tom Delconte's blog post Lykans $29, Vampires $0 !
"66 watts a/sec  -3960 w/min   237600 w/hr   5702400  w/day …"
12 hours ago
tedkidd commented on Jim Gunshinan's blog post The Universe Is Made of Stories
"I think Tom is busting your chops Jim.  The "drivel" part may not have been well…"
15 hours ago
Tom Maides commented on Jim Gunshinan's blog post The Universe Is Made of Stories
"Some of the best scientists of the previous 1000 years were also leaders in the Church.  Aside…"
18 hours ago
Laurie DiDonato posted an event

HERS Rater Training in Massachusetts at Maki Building Center

June 3, 2013 to June 8, 2013
6-Day HERS Rater Training- The first step to becoming a HERS RaterLast Week To Register!Your Cost…See More
19 hours ago
Tom Delconte posted a blog post

Lykans $29, Vampires $0 !

Just wondered, does anyone know of a better looking intelligent managed power strip?…See More
19 hours ago
Tom Delconte posted discussions
19 hours ago
Jim Gunshinan commented on Jim Gunshinan's blog post The Universe Is Made of Stories
"Thank you everyone for your comments. And I mean everyone. "
19 hours ago
Edward Foskey commented on Jim Gunshinan's blog post The Universe Is Made of Stories
"I see no problem with it... Jim, thanks for sharing from your heart not only your faith, but the…"
19 hours ago
William H Nickerson commented on Jim Gunshinan's blog post The Universe Is Made of Stories
"Tom , Once again you missed the bigger story As a rater who cant sell Energy star because most…"
19 hours ago
Diane Chojnowski commented on Jim Gunshinan's blog post The Universe Is Made of Stories
"Thanks so much for your blog Jim!"
19 hours ago

© 2013   Created by Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory.

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Terms of Service