Smurf
7th February 2008, 01:05 AM
It looks like they've decided to put air-conditioning in at work. It's a fairly small office building. 10 rooms in total, 2 of which currently have a split system installed.
A ducted system makes some sense to me but the manager seems to favour 10 separate split system units. My concern is that, in practice, employees will set these to different temperatures and we'll end up with some blowing hot air, others blowing cold air at the same time. A sure way to run up massive power bills for no benefit.
I can see it would be fine if they were all at the same temperature though. But the odds of that are unlikely - one employee considers 18 degrees rather hot whilst the other thinks high 20's is about right.
In practice, does anyone know how significant an issue the units "fighting" each other would be? I figure that if my heater in the lounge at home keeps the bedrooms at the other end of the house reasonaly warm then heat / cold is going to move between offices at work pretty easily if they're at different temps.
One company that came to quote on the job couldn't see how the units would "fight" each other in this way. But then they quoted a ridiculously high price for the ducted system (3 times that of another quote) so seem to be biased.
A ducted system makes some sense to me but the manager seems to favour 10 separate split system units. My concern is that, in practice, employees will set these to different temperatures and we'll end up with some blowing hot air, others blowing cold air at the same time. A sure way to run up massive power bills for no benefit.
I can see it would be fine if they were all at the same temperature though. But the odds of that are unlikely - one employee considers 18 degrees rather hot whilst the other thinks high 20's is about right.
In practice, does anyone know how significant an issue the units "fighting" each other would be? I figure that if my heater in the lounge at home keeps the bedrooms at the other end of the house reasonaly warm then heat / cold is going to move between offices at work pretty easily if they're at different temps.
One company that came to quote on the job couldn't see how the units would "fight" each other in this way. But then they quoted a ridiculously high price for the ducted system (3 times that of another quote) so seem to be biased.