10427 Air conditioners

I know it’s very un-green and anti-social and makes me officially an Enemy of the Planet and all, but I'm going to publicly confess to having installed an air-conditioning system recently. I thought some people might find our experience interesting, not least because with the summer ending, units may soon be on offer at good prices in Italian electronic and appliance shops.

I feel compelled to say first that the unit we installed is not in the house occupied by me, my partner and our baby daughter, but rather in the apartment used by guests when they come to stay. Since we live here permanently, we have a chance to get used to the heat and humidity of the summer and ceiling fans are generally all we need to be comfortable at night, but it seems to us unfair to expect people from the frozen North (Scotland and The Netherlands, primarily) to come to visit us and suddenly have to cope with the sweltering temperatures of an Italian heat wave both day and night.

This year hasn’t been too bad in terms of prolonged heat, but last summer with its highs in the 40s and night-time lows in the mid-30s left a lasting impression on us. I would not want to subject any friend who was here for a brief break to that sort of discomfort and restless nights.

Coming from Scotland and Holland, we knew very little about air-conditioners when we started looking. I can’t honestly say we know a lot about them now, but we did learn a few things that others might find interesting and helpful if they’re ever considering buying a unit.

First, we discovered that the term for the sort of air-conditioner we wanted was a “split system”. This is as opposed to the combined systems you see in the USA which consists of a box stuck in a window or the often-seen type in Italy which is a medium-sized appliance with an air hose you’re supposed to stick out the window. While we could see how this might be a viable way of getting rid of hot air if you have sash windows and can make up a board with a hole in it for the air exhaust hose, how one might do that in Italy with it’s hinged casement windows was a mystery. Shoving the hose through an open window or door would obviously be a very silly and inefficient way of cooling a space since hot air would be constantly flowing in from outside. Boring a large diameter hole through the wall was a possibility, but that would be a serious undertaking on a old farmhouse with meter-thick walls.

The split system, on the other hand, has the cooling coils, a fan and the controls in the unit inside and the heat-removing coils and a large fan mounted outside. The two boxes are connected with two small diameter copper tubes, a power cable and a control signal cable. There’s also a hose from the inside unit which needs to be taken outside so that water which condenses on the cooling coils can be drained away. Drilling a couple of 30mm holes in a meter-thick stone wall is not trivial, but it’s a lot less serious than trying to put a 100mm hole through.

The system we bought came with refrigerant in the big outside unit, so all that had to be done to install it was hook up pipes between the two boxes, draw a vacuum in the pipes from external unit and the cooling coil, then open up the valves and charge the system. This is not really a DIY job, since the piping requires specialised cutters and formers to make end flanges and not many people have a vacuum pump in their toolbox, but it took our local plumber and his two mates less than three hours to install our system.

There are, I believe, systems on the market which are intended for DIY installation, but I can't mention them by name.

The second thing we learned is that many air conditioners these days are actually reversible heat pumps which can be used to both cool a space during the summer and heat it when it’s cooler. Geotherm has talked a lot here about the efficiency of heat pumps for space heating. While a modern air-conditioner can be a very efficient way of heating, it is an “air source” heat pump system rather than the “ground source” or “water source” heat pump which the systems promoted by Geotherm normally are.

What this means in practical terms is that the coil which is used to dispose of heat from the inside of the building in the summer is air-cooled rather that being buried in the ground or in water. When the unit is used in heating mode, the heat is extracted from the outside air, “concentrated” and moved to the inside of the building.

The positive things about this arrangement are that it’s a lot easier and cheaper to mount a box on the outside of your house than it is to bury hundreds of meters of piping underground or to find a source of running water near your Italian house. The main negative thing about it is that, in the winter when the outside coils are cold, there is a possibility they will frost up and so the system will not be able to function as a heater. The efficiency of extracting heat from the air outside also decreases the colder it gets, so much so that at around −18 °C (0 °F), it actually becomes more efficient to run a normal electric fan heater than it is to use the air source heat pump as a heater.

There can’t be too many places in Italy that get hot enough in summer to really need air-conditioning and also that cold in the winter, so I don’t imagine it will be much of an issue for anyone here. The frosting issue seems to me to be a more likely potential cause of difficulties, but perhaps Geotherm will have comments on how much of a problem it might be in reality given Italian conditions.

The most interesting thing about using one of these air-conditioner units as a heat source in the winter is the efficiency. The unit we bought (LG model S12AM) has a rated normal power consumption in heating mode of 1.2 kW, but a heat output of 4.0 kW. (For techie-minded folk, the equivalent figures are a supply of 5.3 A and an output of 13,648 Btu/h or 3,439 kcal/h. The maximum draw is 8 A or 1,790 kW.)

In other words, one of these units will cut the cost of heating a house using electricity to a quarter of what it would be using a conventional electric heater.

I haven’t even attempted to do the math and try to figure out what that means in real-life-Italian terms and in comparison to other forms of heating such as log or pellet fires, town gas and so on, but my suspicion is that it would compare well. There are, of course, many other factors to consider such as one’s concerns about where and how the electricity is generated, the fact that some of us have their own sources of wood, the dependability of the electricity supply in Italy and the sheer convenience of setting a thermostat to heat up a room rather than messing around with logs, pellets or whatever.

The heat pump means that the system is equally efficient when cooling with a normal input of 1.1. kW resulting in a cooling output of 3.5 kW (12,000 Btu/h, 3,026 kCal/h). The maximum input is 1.4 kW (6.5 A).

The final major thing we learned about modern air-conditioners is what a label reading “Inverter” means. There’s a Wikipedia page [URL="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inverter_(air_conditioning)"]here[/URL] explaining the technicalities, but essentially, this means that the compressor (the pump that moves refrigerant between the coils and allows it to transfer heat from inside to out or vice versa) is able to run at variable speeds rather than – as was always the case with older air-conditioners – to only be either running at full speed or off.

This means the system can work a bit more intelligently: it senses the temperature of the room, compares the present air temperature with the desired temperature and adjusts its output accordingly. So when the system is switched on in air-conditioner mode and the room is very warm, the system will put out a lot of very cold air, but as the room cools, the temperature of the cooling coils will be allowed to gradually rise and the fan speed will decrease. When the air is at the desired temperature, the unit will run very slowly, just circulating air and cooling it only enough to offset any heat gain in the room (due to appliances, sun shining through window or whatever). In heating mode, it will similarly produce a lot of heat when it senses the room is cold and then gradually reduce the heat output as the air temperature gets closer to the user’s desired temperature.

Supposedly, Inverter technology can result in a 30% improvement in energy efficiency.

Category
Cost of living - Utility Services

Excellent post Allan - never thought I would enjoy reading a post about air conditioning units.

Very good explanation of an Inverter system Allan. We also supply those type of units and as you say they are energy efficient.
With regards to ground loop systems, these can also be used to cool a house in what is known as passive mode, either through fan coils in the room, or through the underfloor heating system. There are also fully reversible pumps available, which are not realy recommended as you do need to have some form of dehumidification system operating at the same time.
I have not heard of any problems with inverter systems freezing and as the units we deal with are made in Sweden then they have been tested in harsher conditions than those normally encountered in Italy.
Attached is a link to the Nordic Inverter which gives a lot more specifics.

[url=http://en.ivt.se/products.asp?lngID=637&lngLangID=1]Technical data Nordic Inverter - IVT Heat Pumps - heat pump air heat pump nordic inverter bedrock heat hot water heater enviroment energy savings etc.[/url]
[url=http://en.ivt.se/products.asp?lngID=475&lngLangID=1&framework=]IVT Nordic Inverter - IVT Heat Pumps - heat pump air heat pump nordic inverter bedrock heat hot water heater enviroment energy savings etc.[/url]

Nice post Allan. Inverters compressors have been introduced by the japanese as an energy efficient air conditioning system quite a number of years back. Looking at the industry, there has been a new technologies which is making some noise in the air conditioning market. Its called Digital Scroll Compressor which you may find also interesting.

I too was fascinated by the explanation and it wasn't "above my head" but re your comment Alan...There can’t be too many places in Italy that get hot enough in summer to really need air-conditioning and also that cold in the winter, so I don’t imagine it will be much of an issue for anyone here.

I know a few people living in Condominiums on the outskirts of Perugia who would not agree with this comment. So I wonder if in newly built condominiums the system you describe is now being installed as standard?

Certainly in the tiny apartment in an historic building that we rented in Venice last Jan. such a system was being used and very cosy it was too!

At between 1 and 2 kW to run, I guess it would be feasible to run a modern unit from solar panels (although expensive to buy). Is that something that is done?

[quote=Steve Graham;100222]At between 1 and 2 kW to run, I guess it would be feasible to run a modern unit from solar panels (although expensive to buy). Is that something that is done?[/quote]

You might have a problem on hot sticky nights

.

[quote=Steve Graham;100222]At between 1 and 2 kW to run, I guess it would be feasible to run a modern unit from solar panels (although expensive to buy). Is that something that is done?[/quote]
Remember Steve that it is not going to be running continuously, once it gets to the set temperature it will switch off and restart as and when needed.

Alan this information was really useful and good timing for me as I was in the process of researching air conditioning systems within Italy.

I was wondering if you had any further information....

My issue is what size multi split system to install; I have a 200sq/m property (2 story ea 100sq/m) I'm thinking I need four wall mounted units but do not understand what size KW capacity I need.

Plus do you have any idea on costs?

Any advice would be appreciated.

Thanks
Jonathan

[quote=jwareham;108957]My issue is what size multi split system to install; I have a 200sq/m property (2 story ea 100sq/m) I'm thinking I need four wall mounted units but do not understand what size KW capacity I need.

Plus do you have any idea on costs?[/quote]
As you probably realised from my first post, I'm not an air conditioning engineer, but apparently there are very complicated formulas which are used by the professionals to make sure that a given space has sufficient air conditioning, but not too much. The former is unpleasant for the occupants, but the latter is also bad since an over-sized air conditioning plant means it never works at peak efficiency.

While I'm not able to give you a definite answer to your question on the air conditioning capacity you need, there is an on-line calculator [URL="http://www.watkinshire.co.uk/air-conditioning-hire/aircon-calculator.php"]here[/URL] which should be of help to your. Possibly the first thing you'll note is that the calculation is based on volume, not area, which makes perfect sense if you think about it. By the way, I would suggest that you check your house floor area measurements to make sure they're the [I]real[/I] quantities, not the Italian-style ones which are based on the external footprint of the house. All you care about in this context is the amount of air on the inside of the house which you need to cool.

The calculator also factors in other things, such as number of people and heat-producing appliances present and the sort of space it is. Unfortunately, the calculator assumes you'll be wanting to hire an air conditioner for a commercial space, so the options do not quite match up with your situation. However, the bottom line should give you some idea of the sort of capacity you're looking for.

Just to see what the results would be, I entered a room size of 10 x 20 x 3 metres and said it was an office with two people and two heat-producing appliances. The result was to recommend 25 kW of air conditioning capacity. There's another calculator [URL="http://www.climate-facilities.co.uk/air_calculator.asp"]here[/URL] which gives a total capacity of 32 kW for two rooms of 100 m² (the calculator won't accept values that result in a single room of 200 m²), which is not too far off the first result, although the latter does not take account of all the variables which the first does.

Personally, I'd take note of the 25 kW value and speak to an Italian air conditioning person about the options open to you. If he suggests a system that has a capacity which is some multiple of 25 kW, I think you'd be wise to find another engineer. If he suggests a lot less than 25 kW, I think you'd want to question him closely about whether this would be sufficient. In any case, you'll almost certainly be wanting to talk to a air conditioning engineer near your home at some point about the installation since it's really not a DIY job. I'm not sure what you were thinking of or how your property is arranged, but it's possible you could have, say, two outside units – one on the ground floor and one on the first – each connected to two or three internal units. This sort of thing would give you more flexibility about when the units were on (and so obviously consuming electricity).

As for costs, I really have no idea. A thought that does occur, however, is that the current state of the £-€ exchange rates means you might look into buying the units in the UK and bringing them to Italy. I'm sure that if we'd bought the LG unit we had installed last year in Britain rather than Italy, it would have been exactly the same, right down to having the same user and installation manuals.

I hope this might be of some interest and help.

Al