Kitchens & Bathrooms Home Interior Home Exterior Yard & Garden All Categories
Find a contractor for swimming pools, hot tubs, deck building, basement remodeling, kitchen remodeling, home improvement, bathroom remodeling, home remodeling, custom home building, home improvement Build :: Connect :: Grow
About Us | Contact Us | Login | Affiliates  
Homeowners

 
 • Services
 • Project Tools
 • Advice & Resources
Message Boards
FAQs
Project Planning Guide
Articles/Libraries
Home Center
Resource Center
Energy Center
Newsletter Archives
 • Design & Product Ideas
 • Bathroom Remodeling
 • Kitchen Remodeling
 • Pool Center
 • Hot Tub and Spa Center
 • Custom Home Building
 • Lighting Center
 • Roofing Center
 • Renewable Energy
 • Window Fashions
 • Loan Center
Pro Advice Library

 Heating Info From Warmair.net

 Heat Loss

No matter what you do, when it is 68 degrees F inside your house, and 0 degrees outside your house, the cold will suck the heat out of your house. It will pull at a certain rate through the exposed walls and ceilings and through the windows and floors. This is known as heat transfer.

The cold air is also trying to sneak into the building through every little crack in every nook and cranny. This is known as infiltration. Your heat, on the other hand, is trying to escape through every nook and cranny. This is known as exhilation. It's as if the house were breathing. Breathing both air and temperature in and out.

The total of all this leaking and losing at a specific low temperature for your region, is known as the heat loss. This total will be calculated in Btu per hour, and the heating system will need to produce and distribute this same amount of Btu per hour to maintain your 68 degrees F room temperature. As most rooms differ from one another, each room's heat loss must be determined. The total loss of all rooms added together will determine the size and design of the heating system.

In simple structures, the mere replacement of this lost heat is sufficient; but in complex houses with open floor plans and multiple levels, the flow of heat within the building becomes a factor. Heat rising from the first floor to the second increases the demand on the first floor while decreasing the demand on the second.

The formula used here is a combination of three ingredients developed to reflect the internal conditions of a modern structure. It combines industry accepted standards of heat transfer with the old-fashioned tin knocker "cfm method" of computation, blended together with 25 years experience designing and installing heating and cooling systems. The result is an estimate of comfort.

Routine maintenance includes monthly filter replacement or washing the electronic air cleaner grids when in constant use, and cleaning the humidifier if so equipped. A properly functioning gas burner will not need cleaning. Black soot is evidence of an incorrect air mixture or other malfunction and should be checked by a qualified serviceman.

In the heat loss calculation, all windows are created equal, no matter which direction they face. Disallowing for wind factors, similar types of glazings lose heat at the same rate. On the other hand, when calculating heat gain, windows facing east and west gain more heat that those facing north and south. This results in larger quantities of air being distributed to rooms with east and west facing windows. This air is necessary for cooling but not for heating. In the more northern climates, where heating is a priority, enter all window areas as east and west shaded, regardless of which direction they face. This will restore the emphasis on a balanced distribution system rather than one weighted toward solar radiation.

Copyright © 1999 Warmair.com, Inc.


Back to Main Page

 Email this page to a friend  

Service Professionals Join Membership Today
Partner Sites: Home Improvement at ServiceMagic | Contractor Leads at SMPros | Find Contractors at 1800Contractor
Privacy Policy | Site Map | Terms & Conditions | SM Affiliates | Copyright 1999 - 2007, ServiceMagic, Inc. All Rights Reserved.