I need to replace my baseboard heaters and I need to come up with a formula to determine the needed BTUs. The room is 16 X 22 and The ceilings are 30 feet tall. Thanks for any help.
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Originally posted by helen T View PostI need to replace my baseboard heaters and I need to come up with a formula to determine the needed BTUs. The room is 16 X 22 and The ceilings are 30 feet tall. Thanks for any help.
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baseboard heaters
OK, here goes. The room has 4 windows and a glass 8 x 8 sliding door. The one window is 4 x 3 and the other 3 are 5 x 5. The house was recently wrapped in Tyeck 11 and sided. The newer windows are double pane. It is a carpeted area on wood above a small basement with insulated ceilings. The door is also doublepane. The ceilings are 28 feet high with insulation and a 2 layer roof. We live in the Poconos and the temp gets around 25 degrees average for 3 months. I wish to keep a temp inside near 70 degrees. We are buying baseboard heaters with steel cores. Thanks!!!
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There's a formula on the chromalox site in which you plug in values and then come up with the total btu-s required to change 25 degrees to 70 degrees.
I figured out roughly 15,203 Btu-s necessary. Taking this figure and dividing it by the highest electric baseboard heat available per unit I come up with 6.08, 96 inch, 240 volt, 2500 watt baseboard units. All that's left is to find out the cost per 96" 2500 watt, high density heater.
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SINGER is the Cadillac of electric baseboard heat. It has a fully cast and finned heating element unlike others that use a single Calrod element with aluminum or steel fins along its length. These are convection heater units. Other manufacturers are: CHROMALOX, EMERSON, BROAN, NUTONE.
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