Ac motors are used in pools and spas and many more. You can find these Ac motors at any pool place where they sell products for spas and such. Shop around and compare prices.
Most air conditioning [AC] units are divided up into different types or categories. For example, windows units, packaged units, ground mounted, geothermal, and yes even some solar units are starting to appear on the market. For a specific answer I would need to know the manufacturers name and the model number of your AC. The best and easiest way to determine how many watts are in an air conditioner [or used by an AC] is to find the nameplate data from the manufacturer. For window units it is normally located on the left or right side of the unit near the grill that sticks into the house. For other types of AC units it can usually be located by just looking around. Please don't confuse BTU's and Watts. BTU's are a measure of how much cooling capacity the AC has. Watts are a measure of how much electricity the AC uses. I believe you are interested in the wattage so here is a typical example. A 12,000 BTU window type AC typically uses about 1200 watts of electricity. If your electric utility charges .10 [10 cents] per kilowatt hour it would cost about 12 cents per hours to run the AC. There are of course all kinds of variables involved; age of the AC, how efficient the compressor and fan motors are, etc. If you are talking about a whole house AC unit the sizes can also vary considerably and there are many variables to consider. A typical new home of about 1400 ft. sq. located in the desert southwest area of the US would have a 3 Ton AC unit or 36,000 BTU ground or packaged AC unit. 3500 watts - Central Air Conditioner 600-1440 watts - Window Unit Air Conditioner
I dont know what the split is? 2 ton or 22,000 btu of AC should handle this. Put a canopy over the AM sun.
A ton of refrigeration is defined as the amount of heat removal required to change one ton of water (2000 pounds) at 32 degrees F to one ton of ice at 32 degrees F in one day which is 288000 BTUs. Today it is assumed that BTU ratings are by the hour, so one ton of refrigeration is the removal of 1200 BTU/hr. So if your air conditioning unit is removing 108000 BTUs/hr it is a 108000/12000 or 9 ton machine.
The answer is: "It depends". . . . How big a space are you trying to cool? How hot does it get? How cold do you want to make it? The reason "it depends" is because 220v AC units are typically much more powerful than the corresponding 110v units - you can check this by looking at the cooling capacity rating - in the US, measured in "BTU"s - the more "BTU"s of cooling, the more powerful the air conditioner. On one hand, trying to use a smallish "5,000 BTU" window unit (typically 110 volts) to cool a large living area that gets rather hot is an exercise in futility. You can run it - consuming electricity - until the cows come home and it may never do the job. On the other hand, using a 30k / 40k BTU "wall unit" 220 v AC unit in a 9x12 bedroom will rapidly turn it into a deep-freeze - and waste energy in the process. Once you decide how big an area you want to cool - in square feet - any reputable appliance dealer should be able to help you pick out a unit correctly sized for the space.
18000 btu or 1.5 tons.
Roughly 320-350 square feet.
Low side between 60 & 75 or so, high side depends on the temperature outdoors. Capacity of the unit is not a factor.
Inverters and generators are not rated in BTU's (British Thermal Units). They are rated in KVA (Kilovolt amps) and KW's (Kilowatts). These two values are the product of amps times volts. KVA times PF (Power Factor) = KW.
37000 btu
24,000 btu
4800 btu's, ton = 1200 btu's
12,000 BTU equals 1 A/C Ton.
have a AC unit that is rated 5,200 CFM's. What is the conversion to BTU's
12,000
48000 btu
I work At sears the highest BTU's we have is 15,000 that will use 110 outlet