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Posted by Noon-Air on July 2, 2006, 10:00 am
> Tom in PA wrote:
>
>>The house is 2076 square feet, new construction, two-story with most of
>>the square footage on the ground floor. R-19 insulation in exterior
>>walls and ground floor joints, R-30 in ceiling. One big air return,
>>about 12 registers. 2x4 (I'm pretty sure, a slight chance it's 2x6)
>>frame construction. Furnace in crawl space under house. Have some
>>large windows in great room and a glass slider in dining room but these
>>all face north, otherwise normal sized windows. Located in Flagstaff,
>>AZ, elevation 6900'. Average high temperature in July (the hottest
>>month): 82 degrees. All-time record high: 97. Humidity: tends to
>>be quite low.... this is the Southwest. This is a town where most
>>people don't have A/C, and the unit won't be heavily used. You can
>>usually get by with your windows open and ceiling fans. It just gets a
>>little toasty now and then, which is why we want the air.
>>
>>Once contractor says a 3 ton unit is the way to go, another says 5 ton.
>> Any opinions regarding who is right? Thanks! Tom in PA
>>
> Here in SW WI we have 2-ton systems on 2000-square footage homes' and they
> have proper airflow and cool them perfectly!
> Occasionally, we have hot 95-F muggy weather with a heavy latent load, the
> 2-ton still gets by, and is optimally sized for 95% of its runtime.
>
> The Summer Design for Flagstaff, AZ (airport), 82-F dry bulb, 55-F wet
> bulb or around 13% Relative Humidity.
> With that low a humidity, I am betting a 2-Ton with plenty of airflow
> would handle any hot weather you have.
>
> Someone needs to do an accurate load calc and sizing job! Never more than
> 2.5-Ton.
> - udarrell
Ummm.... Darryll, how do you figure "Never more than 2.5-Ton" on a 2000sqft
home?? Care to come down here and run a couple of loads for me??
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