Allgreatmen
Mechanical
- Apr 1, 2004
- 7
I've got a restaurant chain customer with stores in AZ that uses in their standard design a foyer with internal double doors. The foyer area includes seating for people who are waiting for a table in the restaurant. The internal doors of the foyer separate these people from the hostess station and dining room. The issue for the customer is the store operators always remove the internal double doors right after a new restaurant opens.
The customer has asked us to estimate the net annual energy saved for a restaurant if the internal doors remain in place versus if they are removed.
Are there resources out there that can help me with these infiltration calcs? I am not being paid to do a field investigation of actual pressure differences, so I figure the answer will depend a lot on my assumptions. I am planning on assuming the dining area is positively pressurized (per design), even though in reality that is not always the case.
The customer has asked us to estimate the net annual energy saved for a restaurant if the internal doors remain in place versus if they are removed.
Are there resources out there that can help me with these infiltration calcs? I am not being paid to do a field investigation of actual pressure differences, so I figure the answer will depend a lot on my assumptions. I am planning on assuming the dining area is positively pressurized (per design), even though in reality that is not always the case.