BTU/hr + System Recommendation (Concept Demo)
Fast “good-enough + guardrails” BTU/hr estimate, suggested system type, and placeholder product line mapping.
Educational estimate only – confirm assumptions with an experienced refrigeration pro.
iInterior finished dimension. Use inside drywall/finish measurements.
iFor odd shapes, estimate an equivalent rectangle.
iVolume drives baseline load. Taller ceilings cost BTUs.
iGood = tight envelope + insulation + vapor barrier. Poor = leaky / under-insulated.
iTotal warm-side glass area facing warmer space. Glass can dominate the load.
iSingle pane is worst. Double pane helps. “None” means negligible / 0 sq ft.
iTypical adjacent space temperature. Delta-T drives the load.
iCommon wine target: 55F.
iHigh humidity adds moisture load. This v1 uses a conservative adder.
iACH = air changes per hour. 0.2 tight, 0.5 average, 1.0+ leaky.
iDoor leakage is a common failure point. Weatherstripping matters.
iWatts become heat (1W ~ 3.41 BTU/hr). People add heat.
iSteers system type (through-wall can be noisier; ducted/split can be quieter).
System type + placeholder product mapping (edit mapping in code to match your catalog).
Pre-safety subtotal + contributions. Spot obvious culprits (leakage/glass).
What this is: A fast estimator that converts room basics into a rough BTU/hr load and a practical equipment direction.
- Enter dimensions and target temperature (55F is common for wine).
- Pick build quality and leakage (ACH). If unsure, assume Average and 0.5 ACH.
- Add glass/door/internal loads if relevant.
- Press Recalculate.
- Leaky envelope (ACH too high) and missing vapor barrier continuity.
- Lots of glass or single-pane glass facing warm/humid space.
- Oversizing leading to short-cycling and humidity control issues.
Reality check: Educational. Confirm insulation/vapor barrier details, infiltration, condenser environment, and duct/line-set constraints before purchase.
Disclosure: Educational estimates only. Exact results depend on insulation/vapor barrier quality, infiltration, condenser environment, equipment placement, duct losses, latent moisture handling, and usage patterns. Always confirm with an experienced refrigeration pro.
