Energy Conservation Final

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CAUSES AND REMEDIES TO AVOID

THE RESULT OF HIGH POWER


CONSUMPTION FOR AIR
CONDITIONING UNITS
 Air
conditioners cost 40% to 50% of
our total household consumption.
CAUSES OF LOW EFFICIENCY PERFORMANCE OF AN
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT SYSTEM

SHORT CYCLE OF AIR FOR CONDENSING UNIT


CAUSES OF LOW EFFICIENCY PERFORMANCE OF AN
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT SYSTEM

AIR FLOW BLOCKING FOR INDOOR UNIT


CAUSES OF LOW EFFICIENCY PERFORMANCE OF AN
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT SYSTEM

OPEN DOOR / WINDOW WHILE AC UNITS ARE RUNNING


CAUSES OF LOW EFFICIENCY PERFORMANCE OF AN
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT SYSTEM

DAMAGED COIL FINS FOR OUTDOOR UNITS


CAUSES OF LOW EFFICIENCY PERFORMANCE OF AN
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT SYSTEM

DAMAGED COIL FINS FOR WINDOW TYPE AC UNIT


CAUSES OF LOW EFFICIENCY PERFORMANCE OF AN
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT SYSTEM

DIRTY AIR CONDITIONING UNIT


 Choose the right Air Conditioner for
your room with the right required
capacity.
ROOM WITH UNDERSIZED
AIRCONDITIONING CAPACITY
Floor Area : 20 sqm.
Room Name : Bedroom
No. of windows : 2
Location : West
No. of occupants : 2 persons

Required Capacity = 2TR / 2.5HP / 24,000 BTU/h


Existing Capacity = 1.5TR / 2HP / 18,000 BTU/h

➢ LOW INVESTMENT

➢ UNCOMFORTABLE CONDITION
➢ HOT TEMPERATURE

➢ HIGH POWER ENERGY CONSUMPTION


ROOM WITH OVERSIZED
AIRCONDITIONING CAPACITY
Floor Area : 20 sqm.
Room Name : Bedroom
No. of windows : None
Location : West
No. of occupants :2 persons
Required Capacity = 2TR / 2.5HP / 24,000 BTU/h
Existing Capacity = 3TR / 3.75HP / 36,000 BTU/h

➢ HIGH INVESTMENT

➢ UNCOMFORTABLE CONDITION ➢ VERY COLD TEMPERATURE

➢ HIGH POWER ENERGY CONSUMPTION


COMFORTABLE LIVING
Floor Area : 30 sqm.
Room Name : Living Room
No. of windows : 4
Location : West
No. of occupants : 5 persons

Required Capacity = 3TR / 3.75HP / 36,000 BTU/h


Existing Capacity = 3TR / 3.75HP / 36,000 BTU/h

➢ REASONABLE INVESTMENT

➢ BALANCE TEMPERATURE

➢ LOW POWER ENERGY CONSUMPTION


LOAD CALCULATION
WINDOWS EXPOSED TO SUN SOLAR RADIATION FACTORS FOR DIFFERENT ORIENTATIONS TO BE INSERTED AT A
DIRECTION WINDOWS FACE NE E SE S SW W NW N
KJC COMPOUND, PHIL-JAPAN FRIENDSHP HII-WAY, CATITIPAN, DAVAO CITY NO SHADES 60 80 75 75 110 150 120 15
INSIDE SHADES 25 40 30 35 45 65 50 7 A
OUTSIDE SHADES 20 25 20 20 30 45 35 5
WINDOWS TRANSMISSION FACTORS VARIOUS OUTSIDE DESIGN TEMPERATURE - INSTER AT B
PROJ. NAME: JMC SHOOL SHEET ROOM NAME: CLASS ROOM
01 Outside Dry Bulb C (F) 30 (86) 35 (95) 40 (104) 45 (113)
B
LOCATION: SASA, DAVAO CITY NO. ZONE No.: FACTORS 6 15 23 32
WALLS TRANSMISSION FACTOR VARIOUS OUTSIDE DESIGN TEMPERATURE - INSERT AT C
DATA & FACTORS Outside Dry Bulb C (F) 30 (86) 35 (95) 40 (104) 45 (113)
ITEM DESCRIPTION SQ. METER BTU / hr.
1.5 4 7 10
QTY. FACTORS a). Outside Walls North * Light Construction
Exposure ** Heavy Construction 1 2.5 4 7
1 PEOPLE 25 600 15000 Other than North * Light Construction 4 7 10 13 C
Exposure ** Heavy Construction 1.5 4 7 10
WINDOWS EXPOSED TO SUN b). Inside Walls (Single Thickness) 2 6 10 14
2 0 65 A 0
(NOTE: Figure this item for the one sun exposure having largest w indow value.) FLOOR TRANSMISSION FACTOR VARIOUS OUTSIDE DESIGN TEMPERATURE - INSERT AT D
3 LIGHT AND ELECTRICAL APPLIANCES....... (Total Watts in Use) 1789.2 3.4 6083 Outside Dry Bulb C (F) 30 (86) 35 (95) 40 (104) 45 (113)
SUB TOTAL 21083.28 BTU / hr. FACTORS 2 3 5 7 D
ROOF or CEILING (USE ONE ONLY) TRANSMISSION FACTORS OUTSIDE TEMPERATURE - INSERT E
4 WINDOWS (Total of all windows) 0 15 B 0
Outside Dry Bulb C (F) 30 (86) 35 (95) 40 (104) 45 (113)
5 WALLS a). Outside walls North exposure 0 4 C 0 a). Roof, Uninsulated 13 16 7 10
Other than North exposure 0 7 C 0 b). Roof with 1" inch or more insulation 5 6 4 7
c). Ceiling with occupied space above. 3 4 10 13 E
b). Inside walls 3 4 7 10
123.2 1325.632 6 C 7954 d). Ceiling, insulated with attic space above.
(Between conditioned and unconditioning spaces only) e). Ceiling, uninsulated with attic above. 10 12 10 14

6 Floor (Disregard if floor is directly on ground or over basement) 74.55 802.158 3 D 2406 VENTILATION or INFILTRATION QUANTITY TO BE INSERTED AT F ( DATA IN FOOT )
HEIGHT 11.48 LENGTH 34.44 WIDTH 23.28
7 Roof or Ceiling 74.55 802.158 10 E 8022 CFM = ROOM
60
= 153.4 F
8 Ventilation or Infiltration 153.4 F 99 G 15187 VENTILATION or INFILTRATION FACTOR OUTSIDE DESIGN TEMPERATURE IN WB TO BE INSERTED AT G
SUB TOTAL 33568.84453 BTU / hr. Outside Wet C 23.9 20 22.5 25 27.5 30 32.5 35 37.5 40 42.5

54652.12453 BTU / hr.


Bulb
FACTOR
F (75)
30
(68)
3
(72.5)
19
(77)
37
(81.5)
57
(86)
77
(90.5)
99
(95)
125
(99.5) (104) (108.5)
153 183 217
G
TOTAL * Light Construction : An ins ulated framewalloramas onrywall8"inches orles s in thicknes s
4.554343711 TR. ** Heavy Construction: An ins ulated framewalloramas onrywallover8"inches in thick nes s .
 ConsiderInverter Technology when
choosing the type of Air Conditioner.
Inverter units are more efficient
versus conventional units.
UNIT COMPARISSON BETWEEN INVERTER AND BASIC
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT

SPECIFICATION BASIC INVERTER


KPC-18HH5 KV18 - WMARF21B
KSW-18R5 KV18 - ODARF21B

COOLING BTU/h (TR)(HP) 18,000 (1.5)(2HP) 18,000 (1.5)(2HP)

POWER CONSUMPTION Rated (Min.-Max)W 1,800 1,380 (668 – 1,162)

RATED CURRENT A 8.3 6.4

EER BTU/h-W 10 15.11


UNIT COMPARISSON BETWEEN INVERTER AND BASIC
AIRCONDITIONING UNIT

SPECIFICATION BASIC INVERTER


KPC-18HH5 KV18 - WMARF21B
KSW-18R5 KV18 - ODARF21B

POWER CONSUMPTION Rated (Min.-Max)W 1,800 1,380 (668 – 1,162)

BASIC INVERTER
v Kw (Hr.)(7.5 Php./Hr) v Kw (Hrs.)(7.5 Php./Hr)
v 1.8 (8)(7.5) = 108 Php./Unit v 1.1 (8)(7.5) = 66 Php./Unit
v 108(30 days) = 3,240 Php./Unit Monthly v 66(30 days) = 1,980 Php./Unit Monthly
v 3,240(5 units) = 16,200 Php. /Mo. v 1,980(5 units) = 9,900 Php. /Mo.

Php. 16,200 – Php. 9,900 = Php. 6,300 (Savings / Mo.)


6,300 (12 Mos.) = Php. 75,600 (Savings / Year)
SELECT CAPACITY AND GOOD LOCATION FOR YOUR AC UNIT

Be sure our Air Conditioning unit is based on the required capacity


needed and installed in good location. Do not place anything that may
block the airflow of your Air Conditioning Unit.
BE A RESPONSIBLE AIRCON USER

Make sure that no doors or windows are open. Use thick curtains when
windows are directly exposed to sunlight.
THERMOSTAT CONTROL SETTINGS

Set your Thermostat Control at the highest comfortable level. A


comfortable room temperature setting is about 24 or 25 degrees
Celsius but you can lower it enough to 20 degrees Celsius.
SET NUMBER OF HOURS TO USE

Run your Air Conditioner at the given period of time to use like
9:00PM – 3:00AM only for residential areas.
REGULARLY CHECK AND CLEAN YOUR AC UNIT/S

Follow prescribed preventive maintenance (PM) schedule.


FOR CENTRAL COMPOUND, CALL OUR KJC HVAC TEAM FOR
REPAIR AND MAINTENANCE

READY TO SERVE FOR THE FATHER’S GLORY THROUGH HIS SON ANYTIME.
POLICIES TO
REDUCE
POWER
CONSUMPTION
The “estimated kwhr use monthly” is
computed based on the formula:

WATTAGE x # of hours per day x 30 days per


month/1,000 = Appliances kWhr Consumption

ESTIMATED APPLIANCE POWER CONSUMPTION


AIR CONDITIONER
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 600 to 2,700
watts)

➢ Schedule Aircon use in


the Residences:

v 9pm to 3am
(maximum of 6 hours).
DESKTOP COMPUTER
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 400 watts)

➢ Use a laptop if available,


instead of a desktop computers.
➢ Lower the brightness of your
computer monitor down to the
lowest comfortable level or down to
50%.
➢ Turn your computers to sleep mode rather
than screensaver mode. For longer
periods, turn it off.
FLAT IRON
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 800 to 2,000 watts)

➢ Iron large batches of clothing at one time.

➢ Reduce warm up time. Iron first those that


require low temperature.

➢ Never overheat the iron.

➢ Dampen clothes moderately.

➢ Switch the iron off in the last few minutes of


ironing.
HAIR DRYER
(Typical Hourly Consumption:800 to 1800 watts)

➢ Use towel to dry your


hair first before using
your hair dryer to
reduce the
consumption.
CLOTHES DRYER
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 4, 000 watts)

➢Instead of
using your
dryer, air-dry
your clothes.
REFRIGERATOR
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 1, 000 watts)
➢ Move your ref away from the wall
for more ventilation so as to avoid
overworking the motor. Don’t place
your ref near the stove or direct
sunlight.

➢ Defrost your unit once a week or if


there is more than ¼ of an inch of
ice in the freezer.

➢ Do not overfill your refrigerator.


WASHING MACHINE
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 300 to 1, 500 watts)

➢ Wash your clothes in cool water as often as


possible.
➢ Pre-soak stains.

➢ Wait for a full load but do not overload


your machine.

➢ Run your machine on the shortest cycle.


Use the setting that says ‘fast wash’ or
‘eco cycle’.
TELEVISION
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 80 to 400 watts)

➢ Turn your TV off completely and


unplug when done.

➢ Energy is still consumed when


you see the red light on your TV
monitor or when you put it on
stand-by mode.
WATER HEATER
(4000 Watts for 3 hours a day)

➢ Lower the thermostat.

➢ Lower your use of hot


water.
INCANDESCENT LIGHT BULB
(Typical Hourly Consumption: 60 watts)

➢ Use low wattage light bulbs in areas


that do not need strong lighting.

➢ Turn the lights off when not in use.

➢ Clean lighting fixtures regularly.

➢ Switch to LEDs. Replace incandescent


bulbs with LED lights (Light-Emitting
Diodes).
WATER DISPENSER
(1, 200 Watts for 1.5 hours)

➢ Unplug the
dispenser when
not in use.

Energy consumption of water dispenser day and night.


POWER INTERRUPTION / TRANSITIONS

➢ Immediately off or unplug your


appliances.

➢ See to it that when the power


resumes, it is on stable mode to
avoid damage on your appliances.
REMEMBER TO UNPLUG:
• Cellphone chargers
• Computers
• Computer monitors
• Computer speakers
• Microwaves
• Coffee makers
• TVs
• DVD players
• Water dispensers
• ALL electrical devices that have
external power supply connected to
them or with a cubed power supply or
that have a standby or sleep power
modes
• These will still CONSUME electricity
while powered off.
James 4:17

17. So whoever knows the


right thing to do and fails
to it, for him it is sin.
Santiago 4:17
17. Ang nakakaalam na
dapat niyang gawin ang
mabuti, ngunit hindi iyon
ginagawa ay nagkakasala.
ALL Glory and Honor
to our Almighty Father,
our Lord JESUS CHRIST
through His Appointed Son
Pastor Apollo C. Quiboloy

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