Results 1 to 13 of 21
-
09-30-2007, 10:33 PM #1
Regular Guest
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
- Posts
- 8
Only one 5 ton AC unit in a 2-story 3300 sqft new house, please help!
We just bought a new 3300 sqft 2-story house from David Weekley.
And recently we found out they are using only one AC unit (5 tons) for the house. We feel really suprise becasuse we saw most of new houses at this size have 2 AC units. We checked our contract with the builder, and there isn't any word about AC. We also discussed with the bulider, and they said this design past some model-based performance test, so they chose one unit.
All the model homes from this builder using 2 units, even for one story home (~2500 sqft).
We are worrying about the quality and efficieny of this design, and also we heard that one unit will produce a bigger eletric monthly bill for us. The new house is almost done, so it is very difficutl to change to 2 units.
Can anybody help us on this to give a professional analysis or conclusion?
If it does make big difference or affect the re-sale value very much, we might return the house to the builder.
Thanks a lot.
-
09-30-2007, 10:50 PM #2
Professional Member
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
- Posts
- 15
thats really close it should a least be zoned. That will help a little
-
09-30-2007, 11:13 PM #3
Regular Guest
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
- Posts
- 8
-
10-01-2007, 10:54 AM #4
Banned
- Join Date
- Aug 2002
- Location
- Office and warehouse in both Crystal River & New Port Richey ,FL
- Posts
- 18,836
Your builder is well known for quality and energy effiecent construction.Zoning done properly will provide low energy costs.
We used to do work for a competitor of your builder.Our nightmare was explaining why the energy bill for our job ,was twice the monthly amount ,compared to the David Weekley built home next door.
Our builder homes needed 7.5 tons compared to the Weekley home that was 4 tons.All due to the insulation and window/door differences between the homes.Plus the Weekley home had higher then the mininmum required SEER .
IMHO. You can rest assured that your new home will be fine ,or your builder and HVAC contractor will make right.Last edited by dash; 10-01-2007 at 11:03 AM.
-
10-01-2007, 11:15 AM #5
-
10-01-2007, 08:17 PM #6
Keep in mind that when those homes with 2 systems start to have replacement issues, they will be purchasing 2 condeners, 2 evaproator coils and two furnaces, while you will only have to replace 1 when the time comes.
Plus maintenance, only one unit to maintain.Read, read, read!
-
10-01-2007, 10:28 PM #7
Regular Guest
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
- Posts
- 8
Thanks a lot for all these professional answers! I really appreciate that.
I live in Houston. I only know the the system will have two zones (downstair and upstair), and the brand is Lennox. I don't know if the AC has 2 stages.
After I talked to the builder about my concern, they offer me to install a Honeywell F100 Media Air Filtration System and two Honeywell TH8321U1006 VisionPro Programmable Thermostat with Dehumidification Controller. I don't know how these upgrades will help.
By the way, do I need to check with them about the stages of the HVAC system?
Again, thank you a lot for your help.
-
10-01-2007, 10:46 PM #8
Professional Member*
- Join Date
- Nov 2004
- Location
- SW FL
- Posts
- 5,260
Weekley 3,300 SF 2-Story
Zoning done properly will provide low energy costs. ... like DASH states.
Hopefully, your mechanical contractor KNOWS Zoning.
The noted HNY t-stat will provide good humidty control.
Sizing and 2 stage issues can only be responsibly answered after Manual J Load Analysis in performed for YOUR house given the Window and Insulation Specs and house orientation.Designer Dan
It's Not Rocket Science, But It is SCIENCE with "Some Art".

Define the Building Envelope and Perform a Detailed Load Calc: It's ALL About Windows and Make-up Air Requirements. Know Your Equipment Capabilities
-
10-01-2007, 10:59 PM #9
Regular Guest
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
- Posts
- 8
-
10-01-2007, 11:44 PM #10
It matters a lot that you are in Houston. My house may not be too far from yours, if you are buying out West where tons of building is going on. It is 3400 sqft but single story, built in 1989 with single pane windows. My Manual J calc says I should get by with 4.5 tons (delivered to the registers), even though the house has 2 units and rather more nameplate tonnage. Rather to my surprise I think there is evidence 4.5 tons would do the job for my house, provided the airflow can be delivered to where it is needed depending on the time of day. One AC system runs 70% during the day and the other runs 50-60% during the night (I was very surprised to learn this).
So it is not out of the question that your David Weekly home can work OK with 5.0 tons. There are many ways to screw it up, but if done right it should work for you. I would not agree with your wife that simply having 2 units makes things right, it *will* mean double the costs for maintenance. Eventually you will have to replace both units, and they won't last any longer if you have two of them. Your energy bills should be the same whether you have one unit or two. This good news about David Weekly homes being more energy efficient is news to me though, hope it works out for you.
Heck the way the building industry is faring these days, you might try pounding the table and trying to extract a price concession from Weekly. There *is* an oversupply of houses this year.
Hope this helps -- Pstu
-
10-02-2007, 01:58 PM #11
Regular Guest
- Join Date
- Sep 2007
- Location
- Carrollton, TX
- Posts
- 13
For comparison, my house is a 4250 sqft 2 story in DFW built in late '05, it has 8.5 tons split as ~ 3.5 upstairs, 5 down. It struggled when the outside hit ~108, otherwise it's fine. I have all the usual energy star rated stuff - plenty of insulation, low E windows etc. It's amazing how much lower my AC bills are compared to family and friends in smaller houses built 10 years ago (and they keep their AC 5 degrees warmer).
It seems like you might be on the low side for capacity for TX. There are definitely minuses of 2 units, but a big plus is when 1 breaks you still can run the other to avoid complete cooling loss (hopefully it's not 108 outside at the time!). That said, a mini split might be a nicer & better option, if you have a specific room you tend to use in isolation for periods of time. (Media room, home office etc).
I have a 1 ton window A/C on my home office (faces rear of house so HOA doesn't mind) and a 1 ton 2 pipe floor standing unit that I use either in my gym or media room. I'm considering a mini-split for my media room as it's west facing and needs spot cooling to be usable. Something similar may work for you.
-
10-02-2007, 07:22 PM #12
Professional Member*
- Join Date
- Feb 2004
- Location
- michigan
- Posts
- 672
It sounds like the unit is too big to me. You should only need 3 to 3 1/2 ton of A/C for that size home. Return the A/C not the house.
I am the "Wally". All others are meer imitations of the original.
-
10-02-2007, 07:34 PM #13
Alex870, it is difficult to believe that you need that much tonnage in he DFW area.
Could something need some work?
I agree with wally01, the 3.5-Ton for the original post should be closer to a J calc.
What does a Manual J say? - udarrell
AOP Forum Rules:
Rules for Posting
Rules For Equipment Owners
Equipment Owners Find a Contractor HERE!
udarrell



