usma  

[USMA:48344] RE: Air-conditioning

Carleton MacDonald
Mon, 09 Aug 2010 15:17:24 -0700

True.  But nonetheless if all of that stuff in the house raises the internal 
temperature one degree Celsius, that’s one fewer degree the furnace has to work 
to get the house up to the setting on the thermostat (which in our house in the 
winter is 20 degrees Celsius).

 

Carleton

 

From: John M. Steele [mailto:jmsteele9...@sbcglobal.net] 
Sent: Monday, August 09, 2010 07:07
To: carlet...@comcast.net; U.S. Metric Association
Subject: Re: [USMA:48340] RE: Air-conditioning

 

I agree with Martin's response, but the more immediate effect to you is that 
you are heating at electricity rates, which are normally much higher than 
natural gas or other heating fuel rates.

 

Use the electricity you need to, but the waste heat is a cost-ineffective 
offset to heating fuel use in winter and pure waste in the summer.

 

  _____  

From: Carleton MacDonald <carlet...@comcast.net>
To: U.S. Metric Association <usma@colostate.edu>
Sent: Sun, August 8, 2010 9:23:19 PM
Subject: [USMA:48340] RE: Air-conditioning

On the other hand, in winter, wouldn’t all that heat mean the furnace has to 
run less often?

 

Carleton

 

From: owner-u...@colostate.edu [mailto:owner-u...@colostate.edu] On Behalf Of 
Stanislav Jakuba
Sent: Sunday, August 08, 2010 15:34
To: U.S. Metric Association
Subject: [USMA:48339] Air-conditioning

 

Undoubtedly, the USA members on this forum noticed the flood of 
air-conditioning energy-consumption news. I responded to one of these. That 
Letter to Editor is below, and I am adding a paragraph beneath it for USMA that 
addresses SI units.

 

Letter to Editor:

The "How Air Conditioning Is Sapping Our Society" omitted one reason for the 
skyrocketing air-conditioning electricity consumption. It is not just the 
growing number of air-conditioned homes that contributes to the steep rise, it 
is also the higher electricity consumption in homes. And in commercial 
buildings for that matter. 

 

As everyone was taught in school, all electricity at home changes into heat. 
Thus the electricity consumed by each lightbulb, TV, stove, computer, freezer, 
down to the cell-phone charger, heats the building interior thereby raising the 
temperature if the walls are not "cooling" such as in hot weather. More then in 
the past, these electricity consuming devices are left on longer such as lights 
burning during daylight for decorative purposes, computers and TVs always on 
(and when off they still consume electricity unless unplugged), icemakers 
running at full tilt, dishwashers providing electrical drying, etc. In 
commercial buildings, there are more lights, more computers and devices on 
24/7. In supermarkets there are heat blasting bakeries, cooled food counters, 
drinking water and soda-fountains, freezers, etc. whose coolers are not vented 
outside. The heat the compressors in these devices generate must also be 
removed by the main air-conditioners in addition to their basic load of cooling 
people, walls and ceiling. It all adds.

 

Air-conditioners use close to the same amount of electricity for the removal of 
heat as is consumed by the individual appliances. To illustrate, it takes 
between 50 W to 100 W by the air-conditioning compressor motor, fan and 
controls to remove the heat flow a 100 W lightbulb produces. Total power: up to 
200 W. Conversely, a simple turning off (better yet, unplugging) appliances in 
the hot, humid weather saves up to twice the amount of electricity they would 
consume. 

 

And it is not just air-conditioners that gobble electricity for cooling. Ice 
makers are another culprit. About 1 kg of ice is melted/made for every person 
in the US daily. If melted inside the home, some of the energy helps cooling 
the interior but most of the ice goes "down the drain" cooling the underground 
and picnic grounds. I calculated that 2.5 GW is utilized for ice making in the 
US. That is more than the capacity of the nuclear power plants in Connecticut 
combined. Or, to involve renewables, the power of some 12 500 typical wind 
mills.

 

Lastly, the misuse of fans. Leaving a 500 W fan on in a closed room when nobody 
is there, as is often done in homes, schools, and businesses, is not cooling 
it. To the contrary, it is adding 500 W to the room thereby heating it. It is 
the evaporation from skin and convection that cools us; the wind only 
intensifies it. When there is an air-conditioner on concurrently with the fan 
and nothing to evaporate, another 500 W load is added to the compressor, a 
total of up to 1 kW more is spinning the meter.

 

USMA members will appreciate this addition:

Many writers of the air-conditioning, energy-consumption analyses illustrate 
the numbers on the example of the 100 W lightbulb as above. Then they take the 
Btu rating of an air-conditioner and thru convoluted conversions among various 
energy and power units provide a number in yet another unit. In the analyses, 
they often refer to Btus and omit specifying whether it is Btu per something 
such as per hour or minute. Contrasting, the “tons of refrigeration” is treated 
as an energy unit. And sometimes units are invented as if these I-P-units 
numbers were not hard enough to compare even if the terminology were unified. 

 

Why, oh why, don't writers recognize that since all (or most) electricity 
coming to a house changes to heat, and that both electricity and heat can and 
should be measured in the same unit? If they did, one would learn that to 
remove 100 W heat flow coming from that lightbulb requires up to 100 W 
electricity flow into the air-conditioning unit to power its fans, compressors, 
and controls. That would reduce the usual gibberish to the simple "a 100 W 
lighbulb, if lit, requires up to 100 W of electrical power to remove its heat 
in hot weather." To be a bit more informative, a writer could add that if the 
electricity comes from thermal power plants, it takes 300 W of fuel energy flow 
to power the 100 W lightbulb and consequently 300 W to power the 
air-conditioner, or 600 W altogether. And perhaps also hint that a person 
contributes about 100 W sitting idle. Not much can be done about the latter 
load short of going outside, which, come to think of it, may be healthy as well 
as frugal. The impact of metabolism is obscured by the usage of the DV measured 
in Calories (or calories) in the U.S. so that nobody can correlate that heat 
production to cooling without converting. 

Stan Jakuba