We have a 2 story raised house in New Orleans. The house is built as a double, with a center wall on each floor. Each side is upstairs and downstairs. The downstairs has no internal opening. The downstairs is about 800 sq.ft. each side. The ceilings are 10’. The floor is 100 year old cypress without insulation underneath. The walls do not have insulation. The outside wall on each side has a number of windows about 6' tall. The windows are original, single paned.
We are redoing the A/C and heat downstairs. We have considered proposals from various contractors. We are looking at quality of the contractor, brand, equipment rating, price, and warranty. The best overall proposal for a separate system for each side would run about $ for 2.5 ton, 2 stage, Trane 16 SEER A/C, gas furnace, rigid duct, with a 10 year parts and labor warranty on one side and a similar system with 2 tons on the other side. Tonnage recommendations are all over the place. One contractor furnished a J calculation and says it comes in at just under 2 tons per side. Some contractors says the J calculation does not sufficiently account for the uninsulated floor and walls, so 40% has to be added to the tonnage.
Alternatively, we are looking at one zoned system for both sides downstairs. It is impractical to put a large opening between the sides downstairs, so zoning will be needed if we go with one system downstairs. It looks like we can save $ to $ in equipment and installation costs as compared to using separate systems, plus a lower operation cost. We have limited usage of the downstairs, and rarely use both sides at the same time, so a large cost savings is a major factor in our decision.
A complicating factor is that the contractors (We have met with 8.) do not seem to have a great deal of experience with zoning. In particular, each company may have one technician who really knows about zoning, if they have one at all. We believe 2 companies could design and install a good system with zoning. We have concerns about whether, over time, technicians who come out to service the system will be experienced with zoning. That said, zoning seems like a good fit for our needs.
A Trane dealer proposes a 4 ton Trane XR17 A/C, 2-stage variable speed gas heater, high efficiency evaporator coil and Honeywell electronic 2 zone zoning system. That would cost $. That system will not have a bypass. The dampers will be set to stay open at least 20-30% to avoid the need for a bypass. The Trane 20 SEER system with Trane communicating zoning would cost $, which is more than we hope to spend.
A Carrier dealer proposes Carrier Model 24ACB748 4 ton up to 17 Seer two stage condensing unit, Carrier Model 58CVA090116 variable speed gas furnace, Carrier Model CNPHP48 evaporator coil, and Carrier ZONECC4KIT01 B Performance zoning. The Carrier system would cost $.
The Trane warranty is 10 years parts and labor, 5 years on the Honey well zoning. The Carrier warranty is 10 years parts, 1 year labor.
We would like comments on our choice between 2 separate systems and if we go with one system with zoning, our choice between the Trane and Carrier proposals.
Thanks for any light you can shed.
We are redoing the A/C and heat downstairs. We have considered proposals from various contractors. We are looking at quality of the contractor, brand, equipment rating, price, and warranty. The best overall proposal for a separate system for each side would run about $ for 2.5 ton, 2 stage, Trane 16 SEER A/C, gas furnace, rigid duct, with a 10 year parts and labor warranty on one side and a similar system with 2 tons on the other side. Tonnage recommendations are all over the place. One contractor furnished a J calculation and says it comes in at just under 2 tons per side. Some contractors says the J calculation does not sufficiently account for the uninsulated floor and walls, so 40% has to be added to the tonnage.
Alternatively, we are looking at one zoned system for both sides downstairs. It is impractical to put a large opening between the sides downstairs, so zoning will be needed if we go with one system downstairs. It looks like we can save $ to $ in equipment and installation costs as compared to using separate systems, plus a lower operation cost. We have limited usage of the downstairs, and rarely use both sides at the same time, so a large cost savings is a major factor in our decision.
A complicating factor is that the contractors (We have met with 8.) do not seem to have a great deal of experience with zoning. In particular, each company may have one technician who really knows about zoning, if they have one at all. We believe 2 companies could design and install a good system with zoning. We have concerns about whether, over time, technicians who come out to service the system will be experienced with zoning. That said, zoning seems like a good fit for our needs.
A Trane dealer proposes a 4 ton Trane XR17 A/C, 2-stage variable speed gas heater, high efficiency evaporator coil and Honeywell electronic 2 zone zoning system. That would cost $. That system will not have a bypass. The dampers will be set to stay open at least 20-30% to avoid the need for a bypass. The Trane 20 SEER system with Trane communicating zoning would cost $, which is more than we hope to spend.
A Carrier dealer proposes Carrier Model 24ACB748 4 ton up to 17 Seer two stage condensing unit, Carrier Model 58CVA090116 variable speed gas furnace, Carrier Model CNPHP48 evaporator coil, and Carrier ZONECC4KIT01 B Performance zoning. The Carrier system would cost $.
The Trane warranty is 10 years parts and labor, 5 years on the Honey well zoning. The Carrier warranty is 10 years parts, 1 year labor.
We would like comments on our choice between 2 separate systems and if we go with one system with zoning, our choice between the Trane and Carrier proposals.
Thanks for any light you can shed.