Between (.07) and (.24) BTU per cubic foot. For Central Air, might be better to use (.07 BTU per Cu.Ft.) For window AC unit cooling 150 square feet, use (.024 BTU per Cu.Ft.) For window AC unit cooling 1600 square feet, use (.07 BTU per Cu.Ft.) [[[ All scenarios assume 8 foot ceilings ]]]
It depends on your enviornment. A 36,000 BTU unit will probably work just fine. 36,000 btu's would heat a 1,000 square foot room. or more.
sorry
12,000 btus = 1 ton of cooling ....... A 1 ton a/c unit will remove 12000 btu/hour
its usually about 20 btu's per square foot
1 ton of cooling in 12,000 btu's
12,000The HVAC Veteran
12,000 btu's per hour is one ton of cooling. Air conditioners for houses run between 2500 btu's and 400,000 btu's depending on the size of the house and number of units. 1 10ft x 12ft x 8ft room needs about 12,000 btu's of cooling to maintain a 20 degree difference in temperature.
About 8,000 BTU
anywhere from 5,000 btu - 6,500 btu
5000 BTU's should work for a room that size.
A ton is a measure of mass. A BTU is a measure of energy. There is no way to compare them. Possible meaning: 1 ton of cooling is often used to describe 12,000 BTU per hour, so 36,000 BTU/h is equal to 3 tons of cooling.
24000 btu cooling capacity or 2 tons
12,000 btus of cooling , a btu is a british themal unit
Between (.07) and (.24) BTU per cubic foot. For Central Air, might be better to use (.07 BTU per Cu.Ft.) For window AC unit cooling 150 square feet, use (.024 BTU per Cu.Ft.) For window AC unit cooling 1600 square feet, use (.07 BTU per Cu.Ft.) [[[ All scenarios assume 8 foot ceilings ]]]
usually 20 btu's per square foot so......12000 btu's should do fine
1500