skyking
Well-known member
2000 sq. ft. shop .What kind of a/c to install .
2000 sq. ft. shop .What kind of a/c to install .
I have a 2000' metal building with 14' ceiling in OKC. Inside the 2,000' is a 200' office and bathroom cooled with a 12,000 btu window unit. There is also a 150' room with CNC equipment cooled with a 18,000 btu terminal package unit (like a hotel room). Shop has radiant barrier and 6" of fiberglass insulation on walls and ceiling. With outside temp. of 109 today I have to do something quickly. My short term plan is to install a 28,500 BTU window unit in one of the man doors. Long term plan is to install a 5 ton wall mount package unit. Entire unit hangs on the outside wall with only two holes cut through the side wall for supply and return ducts.
Skyking,
I was originally looking to put a package unit on the roof but the curb between the unit and the roof concerned me. I found the wall mount and like that option better. The wall unit is more expensive but you don't need the curb and I can do all the work myself. Check out acunitsdirect.com. I am looking at the W60A1-A unit.
A proper heat load takes into account the volume, exterior surface area, windows doors, insulation and infiltration. Not to mention, orientation, inside and outside design temperatures. Oh yes, the latent, as well as sensible heat are considered. A swamp cooler may work for dry climates.
A mini-split heat pump is nearly always the most economical to operate (window shakers representing the very low end) and how "big" the space is represents just one component of heat load analysis. A properly sized AC unit will be more efficient at removing the latent heat than one that it over-sized.
5 tons, really? Why guess?
I design condition not listed in any of my books but a subject for an ASHRAE white paper perhaps![]()

So....Is an 18500 btu window unit overkill in a 24X30 with 12' ceilings?![]()
As mentioned by BadgerBoilerMN earlier in this thread, there are a great many factors beyond mere room volume that go into A/C sizing. If you want a veracious answer, would need to know design delta T, wall/ceiling R values, infiltration, solar hear gain, etc.
If you want an off the cuff answer, I would say no... 18500 BTU is not likely to be too large. It may even be too small.