Heat sizing question
does anyone have a rule of thumb to determine for the heat load for storage warehouse. In our area for residential with standard 8’6” ceilings I normally use 30 BTUs per square ft., and add in 10 percent for morning warm up, and extreme cold days.
The project in question would use LP gas unit heaters and is 51,100 cubic feet, 2544 square feet. That includes the 20 foot high ceiling which is bar Joyce then metal deck.
Any suggestions would be much appreciated. Thanks to all
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Here is why 30 BTUs per square foot does not work.
If you are using that method for all your estimates, then you will over size equipment on a regular basis. And you thought you were doing it the right way all these years, didn't you?
If this does not make sense to you then PM me for a detailed explanation
Edward Young Retired
After you make that expensive repair and you still have the same problem, What will you check next?
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South Texas?
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thanks for the responses. We are in Maryland. The 30 btus per square foot was given to us a rule of thumb by our carrier representative 25 years ago when the switch was made from atmospheric furnaces, to draft induced. Most contractors in our area use the same rule of thumb
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