1 ton of cooling in 12,000 btu's
Assuming you are referring to air conditioning, and not a ton of coal or a ton of plutonium, then 1 ton of air conditioning equivalent = 12 000 BTU.
12.5 tons
It is a 1-1/2 ton: 18000 BTU (unit size)/12,000 BTU (per ton)=1.5
A ton of green pine sawdust typically contains approximately 8,000 to 10,000 Btu (British thermal units) per dry ton. However, since green sawdust contains moisture, the actual Btu content can vary based on its moisture content. It's essential to note that the Btu value decreases as moisture content increases. For more precise calculations, it's best to measure the specific moisture content of the sawdust.
This conversion is very simple : and is 1 ton = 12,000 BTU/hour.So if you have a 3 ton of refrigeration you have 36,000 BTU/hour.In addition, I want to add that in some large Data Centers, there is a movement from BTU to kW of power used by equipment. This is probably driving the Tons/kW question that the HVAC engineers are telling people cannot be solved.1 Ton of cooling will eliminate 12,000 BTU/hr of heat.12,000 BTU/hr will be produced by 3.516 kW of power used by equipment.1 Ton of cooling will then handle 3.516 kW of equipment load based heat exhaust.
12,000 btu = 0ne ton
4800 btu's, ton = 1200 btu's
A 2.5 ton A/c is the same as 30,000 BTU's 1 ton = 12,000 BTU's
12,000 BTU equals 1 A/C Ton.
60,000 Btu's 12,000 Btu's = 1 ton
24,000 btu
5 ton /60,000 btu's
Assuming you are referring to air conditioning, and not a ton of coal or a ton of plutonium, then 1 ton of air conditioning equivalent = 12 000 BTU.
Assuming you are referring to air conditioning, and not a ton of coal or a ton of plutonium, then 1 ton of air conditioning equivalent = 12 000 BTU.
12,000 BTU/hr
A BTU is a measure of heat energy while a ton is a measure of weight. The two are not comparable.
30,000 btu