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Thread: Correct sizing
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02-02-2005, 10:35 PM #1
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I currently have a 120k btu 30 year old upflow gas furnace. The contractor did a heat load calc and came up with 30k for a 2400 sqft house on the northwest coast - design temp 20F.
The house has been upgraded, R40 ceiling, double low-e argon windows and air sealed to 4.5 ACH. This seems too low to me but then my old furnace never ran more that 10-15mins/hr.
I am also concerned that the blower on the new furnace may not be powerful enough. It's 3 speeds are rated between 800-1350CFM at .1 ESP
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02-02-2005, 11:20 PM #2
What is your ?
30,000btu is 1,000 cfm and the blower pushes 1350cfm. That is okay. (On a A/C or H/P)
Are you putting in a heat pump? Are you putting in A/C with new gas furnace? Will it be 2 stage? What is the heat gain? What is the heat loss? Does it get colder than 20deg? Are you zoning the system? What is the name of your dog?
Karst means cave. So, I search for caves.
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02-03-2005, 04:38 AM #3
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No ac, no heatpump, no zones, no dog just 14 heat registers.
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02-03-2005, 06:27 AM #4
Without a dog, I'd be worried about that sizing. Dogs put out heat to supplement the furnace's output.
Actually, the 120K 30 year old probably has a blower similar to today's 50K furnaces! Nowdays, you won't find a 120K without a 4-5 ton blower but back then it wasn't unusual to find a big furnace that would move around 1200 CFM.
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02-03-2005, 07:34 AM #5
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my 1974 elec furn moves 2100+ cfm! [ per label & as measured]
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02-03-2005, 02:24 PM #6
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I'd really appreciate a response about the sizing change from 120k to 30k
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02-03-2005, 02:59 PM #7
If the heat loss says 30,000 BTU will do it, then get a furnace close to that size. You'll likely end up 20-30% larger as there aren't many furnaces out there that small anyway. You tightened up the house, insulated the he#$ out of it, great windows. You won't need much heat now.
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02-03-2005, 03:18 PM #8
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Thanks for your help. It's hard to believe that those few improvements would result in 1/4 the heating capacity!
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02-03-2005, 03:52 PM #9
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Did you really mean 4.5 ACH? With 8 foot ceilings that 86,400 cubic feet of leakage per hour? You could do wing design testing.
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02-03-2005, 04:06 PM #10That furnace was probably 2X too big to begin with...Originally posted by martik
Thanks for your help. It's hard to believe that those few improvements would result in 1/4 the heating capacity!How tall are you Private???!!!!
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02-03-2005, 04:29 PM #11
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They don't make a 30K but I wouldn't worry even if the unit were 100% oversized. Being heating only it won't make much difference in energy usage. Just make sure the blower can supply the necessary CFM of air to each and every room.
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02-03-2005, 05:29 PM #12
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The energy test report says it was originally 10.85 ACH @50Pa which was equal to approx a 468 sq inch hole.Originally posted by fat bob
Did you really mean 4.5 ACH? With 8 foot ceilings that 86,400 cubic feet of leakage per hour? You could do wing design testing.
After the upgrades it went down to 4.5
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02-03-2005, 05:42 PM #13
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The CFM on a 40k is between 800-1300 at .1 esp. As I said, I have 14 registers with a maximum run of 20ft and ducts of 8x14. The 4 in the basement are all closed off.Originally posted by johnl45
They don't make a 30K but I wouldn't worry even if the unit were 100% oversized. Being heating only it won't make much difference in energy usage. Just make sure the blower can supply the necessary CFM of air to each and every room.
I would need to go up to an 80k to get any increase in CFM
which is between 1100 and 1800.


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