mech5 said:
Ok, well the client said they usually have 50-60 redundancy with thier HVAC equipment. How should I take that? Put in 2 systems at 75%? Three at 50% total load each? If this is what you heard from a client what how would you approach it?...
To sum up the above, here's what I would do.
Question to client:
"You have asked for 50 percent redundancy. There are different ways to interpret that and I need an interpretation so that I give you what you want. Best would be if you could describe what you have done before in other facilities.
Or, I'll give you some examples from which to choose:
1) You need reliability to always meet your load. Say that load is 100 tons. 50 percent of that is 50 tons. The reliability solution would be 3 each 50-ton units, so that you can meet the 100 ton load with one unit out of service. We call this N+1, you have one unit considered as spare or standby that can be brought online to restore full capacity in the event of failure or maintenance downtime on one of the other units.
2) You need room for expected growth in your load but you don't want to pay for an idle unit for standby. For the 100 ton case, that means that you expect to have more cooling load added in the future, like an addition to your building or a whole bunch more computers than you have now. We call this spare capacity. In this case, two 75-ton units or a single 150-ton unit will give you the 50 unused percent you need for load growth.
3) You need your 100 ton load satisfied in normal operation, but you would be happy with reduced capacity during maintenance or failure of one unit. Your 50 percent redundancy might mean two 75-ton units = 150 tons. When one unit fails, you can meet 75 percent of the load and cover it by unplugging all of your coffee makers, snack machines, and microwave ovens. We call this 'kind of silly."
I really need you to clarify for me. Are you looking for one of those three solutions, or something different?"
Best to you,
Goober Dave
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