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I need a rough size estimate for the boiler room in a project I'm designing. It's a mountain resort building, mixed use, multi-family, 4 stories, 180K finished. I'm in SD and need to rough in the boiler room.

2006-06-27 04:28:36 · 3 answers · asked by jedipete 1 in Science & Mathematics Engineering

Thanks for the responses, that's enough to get me going, just what I was looking for. Regarding the last comment, about the choice of system, unfortunately it's not our decision to make, and the owner has an engineer who is ready to implement a proprietary individual metering device for billing.

2006-06-27 10:44:16 · update #1

3 answers

ASHRAE is the organization that publishes the standards by which heating equipment is sized and vented. They charge for their publications however.

Talk with a reputable boiler manufacturer like Paterson Kelly or Hydrotherm and they will probably give you some guidelines for no charge.

2006-06-27 04:39:14 · answer #1 · answered by TeeDawg 6 · 0 0

I agree, talk to a manufacturer of "packaged boilers" and they will be glad to help you with sizing and physical dimensions.

I believe Cleaver Brooks is another vendor that does small boilers.

You could get a preliminary sort of estimate by estimating max steam use for each steam user (each space heating unit that uses steam, each hot water heater that uses steam, basically every place where a steam pipe stubs out). Add the max steam use of each user and that will give you a conservative estimate of the lbs/hr of steam you will need. This might help you with your discussion with the vendor.

2006-06-27 11:44:36 · answer #2 · answered by enginerd 6 · 0 0

don't mean to pry, but why would you be using a central plant on a mixed use multi-family project anyway? You wouldn't be able to individually meter.

2006-06-27 15:13:03 · answer #3 · answered by booyain 2 · 0 0

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