Are You Making These Mistakes With Manual J?

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When you do a heating and cooling load calculation using ACCA Manual J, it’s important to be as accurate as possible with the inputs. A little oversizing isn’t terrible but I’ve seen systems that are more than twice the size they need to be. And I’ve seen similarly oversized equipment recommendations based on inaccurate Manual J’s. The truth, however, is that even if you’re as accurate as possible with your inputs, your loads will still come out a little on the high side, probably ten to fifteen percent.

So what kind of loads should you expect? The old rules of thumb do not work, so if your load is coming in at 500 or 600 square feet per ton, it’s probably either a below-code, inefficient house or you’ve made some mistakes. We do a lot of load calculations and I put together a graph of 40 typical new construction projects. The average home came in at 1,431 sf/ton. (Read the article for more details.) Obviously existing homes can be worse and there’s a lot more uncertainty in the inputs.

If you’re doing a Manual J load calculation, though, here are some of the most common mistakes I see.

Contractors doing these load calculations often feel compelled to stretch a little bit here and a little bit there. Each little bit doesn’t affect the overall load that much but by the time you add them all up, you may be looking at putting in a 4 ton air conditioner where 2.5 tons could work. But here’s the thing:  Even when you’re as stingy as possible with things that add load, you still end up oversized by ten to fifteen percent. So there’s no need to add extra load.

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