The tonnage capacity of a carrier, such as the 38EN024310, typically refers to the maximum weight it can safely transport. However, to provide a specific answer, I would need more context or details regarding the type of carrier in question (e.g., truck, shipping container, etc.). Generally, ton carriers are designed to handle various loads depending on their specifications and intended use.
Looks to me to be a ton and a half.
You can't match an air handler to an air handler. I assume you meant a 3.5 Ton A/H to a 4 Ton condenser. The answer is no. If the A/H was 4 Ton & you had a 3.5 Ton condenser you could with an expansion valve setup. You should really match equipment when possible & I highly recommend using a qualified technician.
2000 cfm. 400 a ton.
One ton of cooling = 12000 btu. Most homes use between 1-5 ton A/C's. Or, 12000-60000 btu of cooling. A 75 ton would be a massive unit! We're talking school bus sized!
Sir Willis Carrier
The Carrier 38CQ039300 is a 3-ton air conditioning unit.
Two tons. 24 in model number is 24000 btu, there is 12,000 btu per ton.
4- ton
Three ton
2 ton
5 TON
3 and a half ton
10 ton
$2800-$3500
It is 4 ton.
It seems to be a 1.5 ton.
48 -> 48000 BTU -> 3 ton