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How Air Conditioners Work
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Air
conditioners employ the same operating principles and
basic components as your home refrigerator. An air
conditioner cools your home with a cold indoor coil called the
evaporator. The condenser, a hot outdoor coil, releases the
collected heat outside. The evaporator and condenser coils are
serpentine tubing surrounded by aluminum fins. This tubing is
usually made of copper. A pump, called the compressor, moves a
heat transfer fluid (or refrigerant) between the evaporator
and the condenser. The pump forces the refrigerant through the
circuit of tubing and fins in the coils. The liquid
refrigerant evaporates in the indoor evaporator coil, pulling
heat out of indoor air and thereby
cooling the home. The hot refrigerant gas is pumped outdoors
into the condenser where it reverts back to a liquid giving up
its heat to the air flowing over
the condenser's metal tubing and fins.
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Sizing
Air Conditioners
Air
conditioners are rated by the number of British Thermal Units
(Btu) of heat they can remove per hour. Another common rating term
for air conditioning size is the
"ton," which is 12,000 Btu per hour.
How big should your air
conditioner be? The size of an air
conditioner depends many factors such as how much shade you receive,
how much insulation is in your home's ceiling and walls and size of
the room to be cooled.
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Air
Conditioner Efficiency
Each air
conditioner has an energy-efficiency rating that lists how many Btu
per hour are removed for each watt of power it draws. For room air
conditioners, this efficiency rating is the Energy Efficiency
Ratio, or EER. For central air conditioners,
it is the Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio, or SEER. These ratings
are posted on an Energy Guide Label, which must be conspicuously
attached to all new air conditioners.
Many air conditioner manufacturers are
participants in the voluntary EnergyStar® labeling program (see
Source List in this publication). EnergyStar-labeled appliances mean
that they have high EER and SEER ratings.
In general, new air
conditioners with higher EERs or SEERs sport higher price tags.
However, the higher initial cost of an energy-efficient model will
be repaid to you several times during its life span. Your utility
company may encourage the purchase of a more efficient air
conditioner by rebating some or all of the price difference. Buy the
most efficient air conditioner you can
afford, especially if you use (or think you will use) an air
conditioner frequently and/or if your electricity rates are high.
Room
Air Conditioners—EER
Room air
conditioners generally range from 5,500 Btu per hour to 14,000
Btu per hour. National appliance standards require room air
conditioners built after January 1, 1990, to have an EER of 8.0
or greater. Select a room air
conditioner with an EER of at least 9.0 if you live in a mild
climate. If you live in a hot climate, select one with an EER over
10.
The Association of Home
Appliance Manufacturers reports that the average EER of room air
conditioners rose 47% from 1972 to 1991. If you own a
1970s-vintage room air conditioner with
an EER of 5 and you replace it with a new one with an EER of 10, you
will cut your air conditioning energy
costs in half.
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