Evaporative Air Conditioning Handbook

Kids, Natural World, Nonfiction, Reference & Language, Education & Teaching, Science & Nature, Science
Cover of the book Evaporative Air Conditioning Handbook by John Watt, Springer US
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: John Watt ISBN: 9781461322597
Publisher: Springer US Publication: December 6, 2012
Imprint: Springer Language: English
Author: John Watt
ISBN: 9781461322597
Publisher: Springer US
Publication: December 6, 2012
Imprint: Springer
Language: English

Air conditioning boosts man's efficiency no less than his comfort. Air-conditioned homes, offices, and factories unmistakably raise human productivity and reduce absenteeism, turnover, mistakes, accidents and grievances, especially in summer. Accordingly, many employers every year cool workrooms and offices to raise summer profits. Employees in turn find cool homes enhancing not only comfort and prestige but also personal efficiency and income. With such economic impetus, low-cost summer cooling must irresistibly spread to all kinds of occupied buildings. Refrigeration provides our best cooling, serving well where people are closely spaced in well-constructed, shaded, and insulated structures. However, its first and operating costs bar it from our hottest commercial, industrial, and residential buildings. Fortunately, evaporative cooling is an economical substitute in many regions. First used in Southwest homes and businesses and in textile mills, it soon invaded other fields and climates. In 1946, six firms produced 200,000 evaporative coolers; in 1958, 25 firms produced 1,250,000, despite the phenomenal sale of refrigerating window air conditioners. Though clearly secondary to refrigeration, evaporative cooling is 60 to 80 percent is economical for moderate income groups and cheaper to buy and operate. Thus, it climates where summers are short. Moreover, it cheaply cools hot, thinly constructed mills, factories, workshops, foundries, powerhouses, farm buildings, canneries, etc., where refrigerated cooling is prohibitively expensive.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

Air conditioning boosts man's efficiency no less than his comfort. Air-conditioned homes, offices, and factories unmistakably raise human productivity and reduce absenteeism, turnover, mistakes, accidents and grievances, especially in summer. Accordingly, many employers every year cool workrooms and offices to raise summer profits. Employees in turn find cool homes enhancing not only comfort and prestige but also personal efficiency and income. With such economic impetus, low-cost summer cooling must irresistibly spread to all kinds of occupied buildings. Refrigeration provides our best cooling, serving well where people are closely spaced in well-constructed, shaded, and insulated structures. However, its first and operating costs bar it from our hottest commercial, industrial, and residential buildings. Fortunately, evaporative cooling is an economical substitute in many regions. First used in Southwest homes and businesses and in textile mills, it soon invaded other fields and climates. In 1946, six firms produced 200,000 evaporative coolers; in 1958, 25 firms produced 1,250,000, despite the phenomenal sale of refrigerating window air conditioners. Though clearly secondary to refrigeration, evaporative cooling is 60 to 80 percent is economical for moderate income groups and cheaper to buy and operate. Thus, it climates where summers are short. Moreover, it cheaply cools hot, thinly constructed mills, factories, workshops, foundries, powerhouses, farm buildings, canneries, etc., where refrigerated cooling is prohibitively expensive.

More books from Springer US

Cover of the book Microarray Detection and Characterization of Bacterial Foodborne Pathogens by John Watt
Cover of the book The Heredity of Behavior Disorders in Adults and Children by John Watt
Cover of the book Service Systems Implementation by John Watt
Cover of the book Urolithiasis Research by John Watt
Cover of the book Intelligent knowledge based systems in electrical power engineering by John Watt
Cover of the book Snapshots of Hemodynamics by John Watt
Cover of the book Advances in Clinical Child Psychology by John Watt
Cover of the book Economics of Electronic Design, Manufacture and Test by John Watt
Cover of the book Handbook of Pultrusion Technology by John Watt
Cover of the book The Creative Engineer by John Watt
Cover of the book Handbook of Marriage and the Family by John Watt
Cover of the book Basic and Clinical Concepts of Lung Cancer by John Watt
Cover of the book Phobic and Obsessive-Compulsive Disorders by John Watt
Cover of the book Teaching Students in Clinical Settings by John Watt
Cover of the book DNA and Destiny by John Watt
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy