EnergyProfessional
Mechanical
- Jan 20, 2010
- 1,279
I need to buy a new load calculation software. Mainly for load calcs and equipment sizing in small and medium sized commercial buildings. Software should use RTS and other modern methods and provide good documentation for review and "sanity check".
some features i really would like:
- Some building wizzard or other way to "see" the building I'm modeling. Importing PDF of the building and tracing on the plan would be great.
- having built-in building elements with actual U-values. For example studded walls should have the correct U-value accounting for thermal bridges
-
Some more details:
- I only have a few HVAC load projects a year (that may change, though)
- I use Revit for duct/pipe calculations, so i don't need any duct size features that some of the programs offer
- in an ideal world i would use a Revit plugin, but there doesn't seem to be a software
- i'm the only user here. some of the programs have very expensive flatrates for unlimited users, so that wouldn't help my company.
Here is what I had researched
1. I had used TRACE 700 and let the license laps: this is a very outdated software and seems overly complex, which can lead to errors. there is no way to " see" the building and one could inadvertently have wrong adjacencies and orientations without ever noticing. It also has no real-building element database for studded walls etc. i had to create my own walls with corrected U-values. i also didn't like that they never updated for actual improvements (e.g. more efficient user interface). importing gbXML seemed buggy. thsi may be a gbXML problem, but i ended up with many tiny surplus walls and had to spend more time cleaning up in TRACE than manual entering of the building would have taken. and again, since one can't " see" the rooms, errors can enter.
2. I tried the trial of TRACE 3D. They didn't address my above TRACE 700 complaints regarding building elements and real U-values. the software was very slow and buggy. In fact, I wasn't able to complete their tutorial building without crashing. Maybe that was back whne it was first introduced, but I'm concerned that a company that made software for decades publishes such buggy software at a steep price. it is quite pricey as it requires annual renting. The price isn't necessarily a problem, but for that price the software has to be very good.
3. Carrier HAP: they have an odd long request process for a trial software and a weird way to have the EULA acknowledged (so still don't have a trial version...). they seem to have a building wizzard, and I'm keen to see if it works the way I envision. Screenshots indicate it looks mostly similar to TRACE but is quite a bit cheaper. I'm concerned with them being so difficult already for just getting a trial version.
4. CHVAC: will try the trial thsi weekend (the trial is limited to 2 rooms, though), but it seems a cheap way to get small projects done. Does anyone have experience with their accuracy and user interface efficiency and reporting options?
5. Wrigthsoft universal: will try to get a trial. their website indicates this software doesn't get updated a lot.
6. IES: I'm a bit overwhelmed with all their different modules and it seems expensive. They don't seem to have a re-seller for my area, and the one reseller listed for US areas (not mine) has a website that looks like it was created in 1995. I'm a bit concerned that they make it more difficult and don't sell directly.
There are some other options, but they are not suitable. eQuest and Designbuilder don't seem to be suitable for load calcs (and I rather not hack around)
If anyone has opinions on the above software or ideas of other products, let me know.
some features i really would like:
- Some building wizzard or other way to "see" the building I'm modeling. Importing PDF of the building and tracing on the plan would be great.
- having built-in building elements with actual U-values. For example studded walls should have the correct U-value accounting for thermal bridges
-
Some more details:
- I only have a few HVAC load projects a year (that may change, though)
- I use Revit for duct/pipe calculations, so i don't need any duct size features that some of the programs offer
- in an ideal world i would use a Revit plugin, but there doesn't seem to be a software
- i'm the only user here. some of the programs have very expensive flatrates for unlimited users, so that wouldn't help my company.
Here is what I had researched
1. I had used TRACE 700 and let the license laps: this is a very outdated software and seems overly complex, which can lead to errors. there is no way to " see" the building and one could inadvertently have wrong adjacencies and orientations without ever noticing. It also has no real-building element database for studded walls etc. i had to create my own walls with corrected U-values. i also didn't like that they never updated for actual improvements (e.g. more efficient user interface). importing gbXML seemed buggy. thsi may be a gbXML problem, but i ended up with many tiny surplus walls and had to spend more time cleaning up in TRACE than manual entering of the building would have taken. and again, since one can't " see" the rooms, errors can enter.
2. I tried the trial of TRACE 3D. They didn't address my above TRACE 700 complaints regarding building elements and real U-values. the software was very slow and buggy. In fact, I wasn't able to complete their tutorial building without crashing. Maybe that was back whne it was first introduced, but I'm concerned that a company that made software for decades publishes such buggy software at a steep price. it is quite pricey as it requires annual renting. The price isn't necessarily a problem, but for that price the software has to be very good.
3. Carrier HAP: they have an odd long request process for a trial software and a weird way to have the EULA acknowledged (so still don't have a trial version...). they seem to have a building wizzard, and I'm keen to see if it works the way I envision. Screenshots indicate it looks mostly similar to TRACE but is quite a bit cheaper. I'm concerned with them being so difficult already for just getting a trial version.
4. CHVAC: will try the trial thsi weekend (the trial is limited to 2 rooms, though), but it seems a cheap way to get small projects done. Does anyone have experience with their accuracy and user interface efficiency and reporting options?
5. Wrigthsoft universal: will try to get a trial. their website indicates this software doesn't get updated a lot.
6. IES: I'm a bit overwhelmed with all their different modules and it seems expensive. They don't seem to have a re-seller for my area, and the one reseller listed for US areas (not mine) has a website that looks like it was created in 1995. I'm a bit concerned that they make it more difficult and don't sell directly.
There are some other options, but they are not suitable. eQuest and Designbuilder don't seem to be suitable for load calcs (and I rather not hack around)
If anyone has opinions on the above software or ideas of other products, let me know.