Model sensible and latent loads with detailed factors. Compare envelope, solar, internal, and airflow gains. Size systems confidently using transparent calculations and exportable results.
| Parameter | Example Value | Unit | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|---|
| Room Size | 30 × 20 × 10 | ft | Sets floor area, wall area, and building volume. |
| Window Area | 60 | ft² | Influences solar and conductive heat gain. |
| Wall / Roof U-Value | 0.08 / 0.05 | Btu/hr·ft²·°F | Controls transmission through envelope surfaces. |
| Summer / Winter Outdoor Temp | 95 / 35 | °F | Defines design temperature difference for sizing. |
| Occupants | 6 | people | Adds sensible and latent internal loads. |
| Ventilation / Infiltration | 180 / 0.30 | CFM / ACH | Drives fresh-air and leakage load components. |
| Typical Adjusted Cooling | ≈ 3.1 | tons | Representative capacity after safety adjustment. |
Envelope conduction: Q = U × A × ΔT. This is used for walls, roof, floor, windows, and doors.
Solar window gain: Qsolar = Window Area × Solar Factor × Shading Coefficient × Cooling Load Factor.
Ventilation and infiltration sensible load: Qsensible = 1.08 × CFM × ΔT.
Ventilation and infiltration latent load: Qlatent = 4840 × CFM × ΔW, where ΔW is humidity ratio difference in lb water per lb dry air.
Internal gains: People sensible = Occupants × sensible gain per person. People latent = Occupants × latent gain per person. Lighting and equipment heat = Watts × 3.412.
Cooling total: Total Cooling = Sensible Cooling + Latent Cooling. Adjusted Cooling = Total Cooling × Safety Factor.
Heating net: Net Heating = max(0, Gross Heating − Internal Gain Credit). Adjusted Heating = Net Heating × Safety Factor.
It estimates room-level cooling and heating loads using envelope transmission, solar gain, occupancy, equipment, lighting, ventilation, and infiltration inputs.
It works well for preliminary engineering checks and quick sizing. Final equipment selection should still consider local codes, zoning, duct losses, and full design procedures.
Sensible load changes air temperature. Latent load removes moisture. Cooling equipment must handle both to maintain comfort and indoor humidity targets.
A modest margin such as 1.05 to 1.15 is common for early checks. Excessive oversizing can reduce comfort, control, and operating efficiency.
Higher air leakage increases cooling sensible load, cooling latent load, and winter heating loss. Tight envelopes usually reduce equipment size and energy demand.
People, lights, and equipment release heat indoors. During winter, part of that heat offsets transmission and airflow losses, reducing the net heating requirement.
This version is arranged around imperial HVAC inputs. You can still use it after converting dimensions, airflow, temperatures, and U-values into the shown units.
Internal gains and solar gains can still create cooling demand. Envelope and airflow cooling components use only positive cooling temperature difference values.
Important Note: All the Calculators listed in this site are for educational purpose only and we do not guarentee the accuracy of results. Please do consult with other sources as well.