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400 CFM per Ton

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Hileg

Electrical
Joined
Oct 8, 2003
Messages
24
Location
US
A rule of thumb in air conditioning work is that 400 cfm of air is equal to 1 ton. If 400 cfm of air and a delta T of 20 degrees is achieved, this is equal to only 400X20X1.08=8640 btu/h.. This is not 12000 btu's. What am I missing here besides a college education.
 
You are neglecting the latent heat portion of the cooling load. The equation you quoted is for sensible heat. The latent heat (3360 btu/hr) is absorbed at the coil by condensing moisture from the air.
 
You should use the equation

Q = 4.5 x cfm x Delta h

to get total heat

HVAC68
 
Hvac68 is delta h enthalpy.
Thank you, this really helps.
 
Yes, Delta h is enthalpy difference.

HVAC68
 

The factor 1.08 reflects only sensible heat and is the product of

60 min/h * 0.075 lbm/CF * 0.24 Btu/(lbm*oF)​

which when multiplied by X CFM results in

X * 1.08 Btu/h​


 
Thank you all,

Hileg
 

A small correction to my last paragraph, it should say: when multiplied by X (CFM) * [Δ]T (oF) results in

X*1.08*[Δ]T Btu/h​
 
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