NikT
Electrical
- Jun 29, 2008
- 4
In Thread 403-17260, Willard3 gave the formula CFM X 1.085 X Delta T = BTU/ hr. Can willard3 (or anyone else) please show step by step how this equation was derived? Is delta T in degrees-F, or C, or R(Rankine)? Surely, the units of delta T would have an effect on the magnitude of the CFM calculation. I can see that one would use the specific heat of air and the inverse of air density to get lbs/ft. cubed to find heat flow. But I'm a bit stymied because I believe specific heat is expressed in some absolute temp scale like the Rankine or Kelvin scale, and I believe air density is in pounds mass, not pounds weight, and I haven't been able to reconcile all the dimensions and units. I might be complicating this whole business unnecessarily, but I don't think so.
Thank you,
NikT
Thank you,
NikT