Rate of air flow (cfm) into/out of machine room for cooling?
Posted: Wed Aug 31, 2016 12:50 am
Hi guys. Thanks in advance for any help you can give me. FYI, I have a related and parallel discussion going on HERE about air flow into and out of my vocal booth.
I’m building a machine room in which all gear with fans will be located in a tall server rack. This rack will contain two UPS’s, a console power supply, a power amp for monitors and a computer plus lighting, etc. I haven’t finished figuring out what the total wattage is but, for the sake of discussion, let’s say that it’s an even 1,000 watts for now.
The room is going to be approximately 50 sq. ft. with 8 foot ceilings for a total volume of approximately 400 cu. ft. My intent is to use an intake fan and/or exhaust fan to exchange air with the adjacent live room which is already air conditioned. I’ll be using silencer boxes at each penetration to keep fan/air noise from entering into the adjacent live room. My questions revolve around figuring out the amount of air flow into and out of the machine room which is necessary to keep it sufficiently cooled.
I’ve been having difficulty finding any concrete guidance on how to get from watts (or btu’s or tons) to volumetric air flow (cfm). I need to be able to figure out how much air flow I need so that I can appropriately size my fans, duct work and silencer boxes for the machine room.
Thus far I have the following:
1,000 watts x 3.4129 btu/watt = 3,754.19 btu/hr
3,754.19 btu/hr / 12,000 btu/ton = 0.312849 ton/hr
Is everything above correct? Now this is the part where I’m stuck. I’ve managed to read that a good rule of thumb is 400 cfm of air flow per ton. I don’t know the origin of that number but I read it on an hvac site. I’m not even sure if I’m applying it in the right context. However, if that rule of thumb is correct, then I would have the following:
0.312849 ton x 400 cfm/ton = 125.1397 cfm
This leaves me with the following questions:
1. Does 125 cfm into and out of my machine room seem reasonable based on a 1,000 watt heat load?
2. Is this 400 cfm per ton conversion factor even correct?
3. If this 400 cfm per ton conversion factor is not correct, then what IS the correct conversion factor to use and how do I use it?
4. Is there some better or more appropriate way to figure out how much air flow I need based on the total heat load of my machine room?
5. Being that the silencer boxes for the machine room are ONLY for preventing fan/air noise from escaping into the adjacent room, would one layer of 5/8" plywood be sufficient or should I still double up with two layers on all sides of the box?
I’m building a machine room in which all gear with fans will be located in a tall server rack. This rack will contain two UPS’s, a console power supply, a power amp for monitors and a computer plus lighting, etc. I haven’t finished figuring out what the total wattage is but, for the sake of discussion, let’s say that it’s an even 1,000 watts for now.
The room is going to be approximately 50 sq. ft. with 8 foot ceilings for a total volume of approximately 400 cu. ft. My intent is to use an intake fan and/or exhaust fan to exchange air with the adjacent live room which is already air conditioned. I’ll be using silencer boxes at each penetration to keep fan/air noise from entering into the adjacent live room. My questions revolve around figuring out the amount of air flow into and out of the machine room which is necessary to keep it sufficiently cooled.
I’ve been having difficulty finding any concrete guidance on how to get from watts (or btu’s or tons) to volumetric air flow (cfm). I need to be able to figure out how much air flow I need so that I can appropriately size my fans, duct work and silencer boxes for the machine room.
Thus far I have the following:
1,000 watts x 3.4129 btu/watt = 3,754.19 btu/hr
3,754.19 btu/hr / 12,000 btu/ton = 0.312849 ton/hr
Is everything above correct? Now this is the part where I’m stuck. I’ve managed to read that a good rule of thumb is 400 cfm of air flow per ton. I don’t know the origin of that number but I read it on an hvac site. I’m not even sure if I’m applying it in the right context. However, if that rule of thumb is correct, then I would have the following:
0.312849 ton x 400 cfm/ton = 125.1397 cfm
This leaves me with the following questions:
1. Does 125 cfm into and out of my machine room seem reasonable based on a 1,000 watt heat load?
2. Is this 400 cfm per ton conversion factor even correct?
3. If this 400 cfm per ton conversion factor is not correct, then what IS the correct conversion factor to use and how do I use it?
4. Is there some better or more appropriate way to figure out how much air flow I need based on the total heat load of my machine room?
5. Being that the silencer boxes for the machine room are ONLY for preventing fan/air noise from escaping into the adjacent room, would one layer of 5/8" plywood be sufficient or should I still double up with two layers on all sides of the box?