Located in Atlanta GA. Home built 2004
Need some AC help from the AC experts out there. A little bit long but trying to put out the full story in the OP.
Upstairs unit has a tiny leak (1lb to half a pound needed per year). Given the leak, I talked to a couple AC contractors a couple years back about a new upstairs system, if I recall both seemed to think both units were sized properly. It just doesn’t make sense to me given the below.
I have a two story home with a full size walk out basement (2 walls open, 2 in dirt). The basement stays 78 in the summer. 80 tops in the peak peak of summer. Basement is not finished and not serviced by the AC.
Have two AC systems that are both with integrated natural gas furnaces for heat. One up and one down. Both are 2.5 tons. Trane XB10 manuf 10/2003.
First floor has about 1175sf liveable measured interior wall dimensions. Basement ceiling and walls are insulated. AC furnace and blower in basement so AC ducts in basement ceiling so registers in the floor. 9 ft ceilings with one 15x15 area with 10ft.
Second floor has about 1625sf plan measured interior. The front door entry is about 150sf of double height space so about 1475sf liveable. Master bed and bath located over the two car garage. AC blower, furnace, and ducts in the attic with registers in ceiling. 8ft ceilings with high treys in the master and master bath.
We keep the house at about 77-78. I’d prefer to keep it a bit lower. Maybe at 75. Upstairs can barely keep up with 77, even immediately after charging.
Ok, so given all of that it doesn’t seem to make sense that with the upstairs being bigger, under a hot attic, over a hotter garage, with the ducts in the attic and a hot open entry foyer that the upstairs unit is the same size as the downstairs unit.
Looking at getting some estimates for a new system instead of keeping this one going. I understand that the units need to be sized correctly or they run too much or not enough (not pulling out the humidity).
I also understand that sizing a unit can be done by doing a Manual J calc. Nobody around here seems to want to do one until you’re already under contract for a system. And I understand that if you know what you’re doing to can manipulate a Manual J to whatever you want the answer to be? Is that true about the Manual J?
Can someone help give me a ballpark of what size I might need to get to replace the upstairs unit?
Thank you in advance for any help and advice you can give
Need some AC help from the AC experts out there. A little bit long but trying to put out the full story in the OP.
Upstairs unit has a tiny leak (1lb to half a pound needed per year). Given the leak, I talked to a couple AC contractors a couple years back about a new upstairs system, if I recall both seemed to think both units were sized properly. It just doesn’t make sense to me given the below.
I have a two story home with a full size walk out basement (2 walls open, 2 in dirt). The basement stays 78 in the summer. 80 tops in the peak peak of summer. Basement is not finished and not serviced by the AC.
Have two AC systems that are both with integrated natural gas furnaces for heat. One up and one down. Both are 2.5 tons. Trane XB10 manuf 10/2003.
First floor has about 1175sf liveable measured interior wall dimensions. Basement ceiling and walls are insulated. AC furnace and blower in basement so AC ducts in basement ceiling so registers in the floor. 9 ft ceilings with one 15x15 area with 10ft.
Second floor has about 1625sf plan measured interior. The front door entry is about 150sf of double height space so about 1475sf liveable. Master bed and bath located over the two car garage. AC blower, furnace, and ducts in the attic with registers in ceiling. 8ft ceilings with high treys in the master and master bath.
We keep the house at about 77-78. I’d prefer to keep it a bit lower. Maybe at 75. Upstairs can barely keep up with 77, even immediately after charging.
Ok, so given all of that it doesn’t seem to make sense that with the upstairs being bigger, under a hot attic, over a hotter garage, with the ducts in the attic and a hot open entry foyer that the upstairs unit is the same size as the downstairs unit.
Looking at getting some estimates for a new system instead of keeping this one going. I understand that the units need to be sized correctly or they run too much or not enough (not pulling out the humidity).
I also understand that sizing a unit can be done by doing a Manual J calc. Nobody around here seems to want to do one until you’re already under contract for a system. And I understand that if you know what you’re doing to can manipulate a Manual J to whatever you want the answer to be? Is that true about the Manual J?
Can someone help give me a ballpark of what size I might need to get to replace the upstairs unit?
Thank you in advance for any help and advice you can give