scottreiner
scott reiner
anyone have any advise as to recommended cooling/humidity units for a 200 - 300 square foot room?
originally posted by scottreiner: wine cellar infoanyone have any advise as to recommended cooling/humidity units for a 200 - 300 square foot room?
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
Scott, I am a very big proponent of the split commercial cooling units like those used for restaurant refrigeration.
I could cool my cellar to 45 degrees and it has performed flawlessly for 25+ years (as I knock on wood).
You will need a condensation drain for the air handler in the cellar.
. . . . . Pete
thanks all.originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by scottreiner: wine cellar infoanyone have any advise as to recommended cooling/humidity units for a 200 - 300 square foot room?
Scott, I am a very big proponent of the split commercial cooling units like those used for restaurant refrigeration.
I could cool my cellar to 45 degrees and it has performed flawlessly for 25+ years (as I knock on wood).
You will need a condensation drain for the air handler in the cellar.
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by scottreiner: as to the split commercial cooling units, any specific brands you would recommend?
originally posted by JasonA:
Don't know if Cellartec is in business or not - they are or were part of Apex.
Not being able to cool down to 50 with humidity being too high are all part of cellar design and use. The usual problem will conventional refrigeration systems is driving the humidity too low. Wine cellar refrigeration systems are usually designed with over-sized evaporator units to avoid this problem. If your humidity is too high and you can't reach 50 degrees is an indication that your cooling unit is under sized for the load. Then again if you can reach 50 degrees easily and the humidity is too high is an indication that the unit is over sized.
Regardless, if you are going to invest the time and money into a home cellar, you really need "expert" advice on the whole package - which translates into generslly avoiding the "drop shipper"
originally posted by Mark Davis: You want an 80% duty cycle
originally posted by Tom Glasgow:
Read the manuals? Are you serious?
originally posted by Peter Creasey:
originally posted by Mark Davis: You want an 80% duty cycle
Mark, If by this you mean the unit needs to run 80% of the time then this is contrary to my thinking and experience.
My unit probably runs about (or maybe even less than?) 10% of the time to maintain a temperature at or slightly below 60 degrees. I'm estimating the percentage as I have never considered it a concern.
Over 25+ years, I've never had humidity problems except for discolored labels on the bottles right next to the air handler.
During construction, I did pay VERY careful attention to the vapor barrier and the insulation, including in the floor and insulated metal door.
. . . . . Pete
originally posted by Mark Davis: Lots of variables are involved, what works in your system, with your parts, almost certainly will not work in another system, with different parts, in a different room, in a different state, with different ducting, line lengths, weather, cellar usages, lights, etc, etc.
originally posted by Mark Davis:
Peter-
My recommendation: get a split system, have it expertly designed (by someone other than cellartec), factor in all the unique parameters of your system and room, and...realize 50deg/70% hum is much different than 55/70 or 60/70 in terms of system design.
..and condensate pumps/lines suck in cold weather and add add'l risk. Drain w/gravity..and definitely drain it -- you don't want the potential for extra humidity near your air handler.
--mark