Size of Heat Pump in Tons

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Frank DuVal

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Fredericksburg, VA 21 Hours from Winged Horses wi
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Electrical Contractor, Electrical Engineer
If you stuck with SI there would be no conversion required.....

Stuck with? We did stick with HP. :happyyes: Youse guys changed! All the old British iron is rated in horsepower. Even taxed on Tax Horsepower back then.;) Hence way the long stroke small diameter cylinders were all the rage back then, as Tax Horsepower was derived from a math formula instead of actual performance data....
 

Besoeker3

Senior Member
Location
UK
Occupation
Retired Electrical Engineer
Stuck with? We did stick with HP. :happyyes: Youse guys changed! All the old British iron is rated in horsepower. Even taxed on Tax Horsepower back then.;) Hence way the long stroke small diameter cylinders were all the rage back then, as Tax Horsepower was derived from a math formula instead of actual performance data....
Engine power here is still quoted in horsepower. I don't know why.
 

PaulMmn

Senior Member
Location
Union, KY, USA
Occupation
EIT - Engineer in Training, Lafayette College
The 'problem' with the metric system is that so many teachers are very concerned about converting from one system to the other. Yuck!

Don't convert! Remember that one Mars probe that crash landed because some units were metric and some English? https://www.latimes.com/archives/la-xpm-1999-oct-01-mn-17288-story.html

Some things are easy to 'convert' when needed: A meter is a yard, more or less. For any approximations, 100 meters is a football field long. A foot is 30 cm (300 mm)(0.3 meter).

Most automobile components are metric; although some are still English. We buy bottles of soft drinks in 1 or 2 liter bottles. Milk still comes in quarts, half- and full-gallons. Cans of beverages are still 12 fluid ounces. My model train track comes in metric sizes, but the packaging has English conversion units on it. Double-yuck!

And those 50.8 x 101.6 studs-- that's a 'rounding error.' Let the lumber yards loose, and they'll be 50 x 100 studs. The rest will be lost because they were''planed after drying.' Space those studs 400 cm apart (that's a hair less than 16") or 600 cm (~24").

Pick one standard and stick with it for the duration of the project!
 

MAC702

Senior Member
Location
Clark County, NV
...here it is kind of rare to find a tape measure that is marked in SI units only. ....

A client loaned me his tape measure yesterday. It was marked solely in inches on the tape. I was doing an inside measurement, and went to verify the added length of the body of the tape measure itself. It said "+ 76mm"
 

Carultch

Senior Member
Location
Massachusetts
About a century and a half ago, in the early days of mechanical refrigeration, icehouse operators asked refrigeration salesmen, "What'll this do for me?" Their response: "This machine will provide the same cooling effect as consuming a ton of ice every day." And the refrigeration ton was born.

But we no longer use icehouses. It would be a good thing if we also quit using refrigeration tons.
(HVACR engineers are among the slowest to adopt new ideas ... if something introduced in 1799 can still be considered "new". Many of them still use Roman Numeral prefixes.)

It only accounts for the cooling effect as 1 ton of 0C ice turns into 0C water, i.e. the latent heat of fusion. That happens to be where (within the heat energy diagram) that most of the energy absorption occurs in the H2O. It doesn't account ice that starts below 0C having to absorb energy to get to 0C in the first place, and it doesn't account for any temperature gain the water has after it melts.
 

Carultch

Senior Member
Location
Massachusetts
SO, I get a cooling system rated in killowatts. How does that help me wire it? DIvide KW by system voltage to get amps? I thought so, it is still read the nameplate! Now I have a product with TWO killowatt ratings. That is not confusing?:?

Much clearer with Killowatts being the amount of electricity consumed and the cooling ability in BTU or tons.

Same with motors/engines rated in horsepower. I know what a 300 HP engine does in a car. I have to convert to use KW of engine.

When both input and output ratings are in kilowatts, and specified so you can see which is which, it TELLS YOU SOMETHING about what is happening within the machine. It shows you the inputs and outputs, so you can compare both power ratings on the same scale of numbers. Having separate units for electric power, mechanical power, thermal power, etc, obscures this information. Physical reality is that no machine is 100% efficient at turning the energy we put in the machine into energy we want out of it.

We expect a motor to have some power lost to heat, and we expect an engine of the same capacity to have a lot more power lost to heat and exhaust. Refrigeration systems are a different stroy, because they extract power from either the cooling space, or surrounding cold environment in the case of heat pumps, and generally can "pump" more thermal power from cold space to hot space, than the electric power needed to supply them.
 

Carultch

Senior Member
Location
Massachusetts
And those 50.8 x 101.6 studs-- that's a 'rounding error.' Let the lumber yards loose, and they'll be 50 x 100 studs. The rest will be lost because they were''planed after drying.' Space those studs 400 cm apart (that's a hair less than 16") or 600 cm (~24").

The metric-using countries, identify dimensional lumber by actual size, rather than nominal. What a concept!

The closest equivalent of 2x4, is 35x90, and their lumber is close in actual size to inch-nominal standard lumber sizes, rounded to multiples of either 5 or 10 mm. Plywood and drywall come in 1200 mm x 2400 mm, which is what a 4'x8' sheet would be, when rounded to the nearest 100 mm. Multiples of 100 mm, such as 400 mm and 600 mm, are common for standard spacing of studs, joists and rafters.
 

drcampbell

Senior Member
Location
The Motor City, Michigan USA
Occupation
Registered Professional Engineer
No confusion??????????????:?
You must be young!:p

SO, I get a cooling system rated in killowatts. How does that help me wire it? DIvide KW by system voltage to get amps? I thought so, it is still read the nameplate! Now I have a product with TWO killowatt ratings. That is not confusing?:?

Much clearer with Killowatts being the amount of electricity consumed and the cooling ability in BTU or tons. ...

In the mean time, I need some device boxes to fit those 50.8 x 101.6 studs. Easier, right!:lol:
If using multiple different units to measure the same thing wasn't confusing, this thread wouldn't exist.

Born 1959.
You'll wire it the same way you do now: by the CURRENT consumption on the nameplate. Minimum circuit capacity, maximum fuse size. Not by the power it delivers and not by the power it consumes.

My forecast: By the time we finally drop the British system of weights and measures, we will also be in the habit of displaying the ACTUAL dimensions of things. One (?) of the big box stores is already doing this as a result of a lawsuit claiming it was false advertising to call a wall stud a "2x4" when in reality, it's actually 28% less than that. But I ain't holding my breath; it takes 50-100 years for the building industry to adopt a "new" idea. (for example: the far-superior Torx hexalobular screwhead (ISO 10664) was developed in 1967)

Stuck with? We did stick with HP. Youse guys changed! All the old British iron is rated in horsepower. Even taxed on Tax Horsepower back then. Hence way the long stroke small diameter cylinders were all the rage back then, as Tax Horsepower was derived from a math formula instead of actual performance data....
Ah, yes ... yet another example of a cockamamie indirect measurement. Not only is it peculiar and not terribly reality-based, (British tax horsepower is a measure of the total area of the piston tops) but it's also defined differently in different jurisdictions.

This particular example has nothing to do with which unit system was selected; it's an example of a rule imposed by people who just didn't have a clue about the art & science of measurement itself. It would have been equally stupid -- and had the same unintended consequences -- had it been defined in SI.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tax_horsepower

Of course, lots of dimensions are still nominal rather than actual. ...
That should be one of the FIRST things corrected. It's SO much fun to try to explain to newbies that you can't fit a "3-inch" pipe in a "4-inch" stud space.

[The refrigeration ton] only accounts for the cooling effect as 1 ton of 0°C ice turns into 0°C water, i.e. the latent heat of fusion. ... It doesn't account ice that starts below 0°C having to absorb energy to get to 0°C in the first place, and it doesn't account for any temperature gain the water has after it melts.
Right you are. But I doubt anybody was being that precise in the 1800s, when the refrigeration ton was defined.
I also doubt it caused much of an error in practice. Natural ice -- harvested from ponds & rivers and capped with an insulating layer of snow -- was probably never much below 0°C, and since it's cold in an icehouse, the meltwater was probably never much above 0°C when it was discarded.
 
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Besoeker3

Senior Member
Location
UK
Occupation
Retired Electrical Engineer
If using multiple different units to measure the same thing wasn't confusing, this thread wouldn't exist.

Born 1959.
You'll wire it the same way you do now: by the CURRENT consumption on the nameplate. Minimum circuit capacity, maximum fuse size. Not by the power it delivers and not by the power it consumes.



Right you are. But I doubt anybody was being that precise in the 1800s, when the refrigeration ton was defined.
I also doubt it caused much of an error in practice. Natural ice -- harvested from ponds & rivers and capped with an insulating layer of snow -- was probably never much below 0°C, and since it's cold in an icehouse, the meltwater was probably never much above 0°C when it was discarded.

Interesting that you are using centigrade.......but your weather is given in Fahrenheit..........
 

Besoeker3

Senior Member
Location
UK
Occupation
Retired Electrical Engineer
I'm almost completely bilingual.
I also live just 16 km north of the Canadian border, and often travel there and/or tune into Canadian broadcasting.
Most unit conversions I can do mentally. Maybe that makes me bilingual too?
I've been to Canada numerous times. From St Johns Island off the east coast to Vancouver Island off the west coast. In fact, it took longer to fly from London to Ottawa than it took to fly across Canada.

Mostly variable speed drives on cranes on icebreakers. Getting back to units, they were rated at 275kW

I digress.
 

drcampbell

Senior Member
Location
The Motor City, Michigan USA
Occupation
Registered Professional Engineer
... it took longer to fly from London to Ottawa than it took to fly across Canada. ...
Typo? I would think it would take less time to cross the Atlantic than to cross Canada. (I presume you're not referring to London, Ontario or London, Ohio) There are many, many jokes about the vastness (and flatness) of the Canadian prairies and many, many awe-struck reports about the vastness (and grandeur) of the Canadian Rockies.

The Winnipeg comedy festival is one of the best on Earth. Likely because Manitoba winters give you lots of time to huddle indoors and polish your material.
 

kwired

Electron manager
Location
NE Nebraska
No confusion??????????????:?

You must be young!:p

SO, I get a cooling system rated in killowatts. How does that help me wire it? DIvide KW by system voltage to get amps? I thought so, it is still read the nameplate! Now I have a product with TWO killowatt ratings. That is not confusing?:?

Much clearer with Killowatts being the amount of electricity consumed and the cooling ability in BTU or tons.

Same with motors/engines rated in horsepower. I know what a 300 HP engine does in a car. I have to convert to use KW of engine.

Cubic inch to liters is not too hard, a factor of 60.8. After 35 years most have learned what size engines are in liters.

Maybe in another 35 years when we are gone young guys will speak of KW in cars, but not yet here!:thumbsup:

By then cars will be electric and KW will seem so more applicable anyway.

In the mean time, I need some device boxes to fit those 50.8 x 101.6 studs. Easier, right!:lol:

IEC electric motors are rated in kW - it is the output rating though.

Knowing displacement of an ICE doesn't tell you the output rating, though if you know much about them it likely gives you a ballpark estimate of it's rating.
 

Besoeker3

Senior Member
Location
UK
Occupation
Retired Electrical Engineer
Typo? I would think it would take less time to cross the Atlantic than to cross Canada. (I presume you're not referring to London, Ontario or London, Ohio) There are many, many jokes about the vastness (and flatness) of the Canadian prairies and many, many awe-struck reports about the vastness (and grandeur) of the Canadian Rockies.

The Winnipeg comedy festival is one of the best on Earth. Likely because Manitoba winters give you lots of time to huddle indoors and polish your material.
You are right again.

This might give you, and others, an idea of what I did............I've removed company names so maybe the mods will permit it.

 
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