jll4065
Mechanical
- Jan 29, 2005
- 5
In troubleshooting a reported condensation issue in a local restaurant (Myrtle Beach, SC), built less than 1 year ago, I find the following:
- condensation at table tops in dining room, heavy enough to warp/split new wood tables (mainly in summer), and keep salt shakers caked up
- untempered fresh air intakes on (3) RTU's in dining room; total tonnage 21 tons with estimated fresh air at least 2000 CFM, over 1500 CFM thru 1 7.5 ton unit (too much!); total AH flow ~ 8400 CFM
- untempered fresh air intakes on (2) RTU's in kitchen; total tonnage 12 tons with estimated fresh air at least 1100 CFM; AH flow ~ 4800 CFM
- approx. 600 CFM differential between kitchen hood exhaust and dedicated makeup air (MUA ~ 90% of exhaust, total exhaust ~ 5300 CFM)
The client's kitchen hood supplier recommends a DX makeup air conditioning system, but I don;t think the dining room condensation is being caused by kitchen makeup air differentials. I lean towards:
a) balancing dining room units fresh air to distribute OA load
b) install ERV's to temper OA
c) reduce OA flow (my calcs show abt. 1700 CFM required)
d) in lieu of a dedicated MUA DX system, bring in more OA thru the kitchen RTU's and condition there.
This is all preliminary, and I appreciate any other opinions about this kind of situation...the owner wants to avoid spending unnecessary money.
Other data:
Dining room area ~ 2200 SF
Kitchen area ~ 1600 SF
Hood size - 22' x 4.5 '
Occupancy ~ 180 patrons, ~ 20 staff
Thanks for your insights!
- condensation at table tops in dining room, heavy enough to warp/split new wood tables (mainly in summer), and keep salt shakers caked up
- untempered fresh air intakes on (3) RTU's in dining room; total tonnage 21 tons with estimated fresh air at least 2000 CFM, over 1500 CFM thru 1 7.5 ton unit (too much!); total AH flow ~ 8400 CFM
- untempered fresh air intakes on (2) RTU's in kitchen; total tonnage 12 tons with estimated fresh air at least 1100 CFM; AH flow ~ 4800 CFM
- approx. 600 CFM differential between kitchen hood exhaust and dedicated makeup air (MUA ~ 90% of exhaust, total exhaust ~ 5300 CFM)
The client's kitchen hood supplier recommends a DX makeup air conditioning system, but I don;t think the dining room condensation is being caused by kitchen makeup air differentials. I lean towards:
a) balancing dining room units fresh air to distribute OA load
b) install ERV's to temper OA
c) reduce OA flow (my calcs show abt. 1700 CFM required)
d) in lieu of a dedicated MUA DX system, bring in more OA thru the kitchen RTU's and condition there.
This is all preliminary, and I appreciate any other opinions about this kind of situation...the owner wants to avoid spending unnecessary money.
Other data:
Dining room area ~ 2200 SF
Kitchen area ~ 1600 SF
Hood size - 22' x 4.5 '
Occupancy ~ 180 patrons, ~ 20 staff
Thanks for your insights!