Electric Heat Brochure

Page 26
Electrical Fundamentals
Ohm's Law
The relationship between Wattage (heat) output and the applied
Voltage of electric resistance heating elements is determined by a
precise physical rule defined as Ohm's Law which states that the
current in a resistance heating element is directly proportional to the
applied Voltage. Ohm's Law is traditionally expressed as:
The same equation using the conventional abbreviation for voltage is:
An unknown electrical value can be derived by using any two known
values in one of the variations of Ohm's Law shown at the right.
W
I
W
R
IR
W
V
V
R
W
I
V
I
V
R
VI
I
2
R
WR
2
V
W
2
2
V
(VOLTS)
I
(AMPS)
(OHMS)
R
(WATTS)
W
WATTS
AMPERES
VOLTS
VOLTS = WATTS x OHMS
VOLTS =
VOLTS = AMPERES x OHMS
VOLTS
AMPERES
WATTS
AMPERES
2
VOLTS
2
WATTS
OHMS
OHMS =
OHMS =
OHMS =
VOLTS
2
OHMS
WATTS
WATTS = VOLTS x AMPERES
WATTS = AMPERES
2
x OHMS
WATTS =
VOLTS
OHMS
WATTS
VOLTS
WATTS
OHMS
AMPERES
AMPERES =
AMPERES =
AMPERES =
I =
E Where: I = Amperes (Current)
R E = Voltage
R = Ohms (Resistance)
I =
V Where: I = Amperes (Current)
R V = Voltage
R = Ohms (Resistance)
FAQ
What is required for properly sizing a heater in my room?
- If you have a room with 8 feet ceiling height; you can calculate
the square footage times 10 watts per square foot.
- If your ceiling is higher than 8 feet; calculate the cubic footage
L x W x H and multiply by I watt per square foot.
- If you plan on heating a garage calculate the cubic footage
L x W x H and multiply by I watt per square foot and multiply
the square footage for each garage door by 48 (watts per square
foot) and add this amount to the cubic footage. This will be
the amount required to heat the garage.
Are 120 volts and 240 volts heaters interchangeable?
- A 240 volts heater run at 120 volts will produce 1/4 of the rated
wattage. A 120 volts heater run at 240 volts will be destroyed
and could cause fire damage to the building.
If I know the BTU's required; how do I calculate the watts
required?
- Watts = BTU/3.412 (I Watt = 3.41 BTU)
Calculating Temperature Rise?
- Sometimes your heater does not feel like it is putting out enough
heat. Why not, you ask?
- Temperature rise is calculated by taking the kW times the
constant 3167 divided by the CFM. For instance:
5kW x 3167/300CFM = 15835/300CFM = 52.8 °F. If your
ambient temperature is 60 °F the outlet air is 112 °F.
Power
kW
Voltage (ph)
120V (1) 208V (1) 208V (3) 240V (1) 240V (3) 277V (1)
0.3 2.50 1.45 0.83 1.25 0.72 1.09
0.4 3.34 1.92 1.11 1.67 0.97 1.45
0.5 4.17 2.41 1.39 2.09 1.21 1.81
0.6 5.00 2.89 1.66 2.50 1.45 2.17
0.75 6.25 3.61 2.09 3.13 1.81 2.71
0.8 6.67 3.85 2.23 3.34 1.93 2.89
1.0 8.34 4.81 2.78 4.17 2.41 3.61
1.2 10.00 5.77 3.34 5.00 2.89 4.34
1.25 10.42 6.01 3.47 5.21 3.01 4.52
1.4 11.67 6.73 3.89 5.84 3.38 5.06
1.5 12.50 7.22 4.17 6.25 3.61 5.42
1.6 13.34 7.70 4.45 6.67 3.86 5.78
1.75 14.59 8.42 4.87 7.30 4.22 6.32
2.0 16.67 9.62 5.56 8.34 4.82 7.22
2.25 18.75 10.82 6.25 9.38 5.42 8.13
2.5 20.84 12.02 6.95 10.42 6.02 9.03
3.0 25.00 14.43 8.34 12.50 7.23 10.83
4.0 33.34 19.23 11.12 16.67 9.64 14.44
4.5 37.50 21.64 12.50 18.75 10.84 16.25
5.0 41.67 24.04 13.90 20.84 12.05 18.05
6.0 50.00 28.85 16.68 25.00 14.45 21.66
7.5 62.50 36.06 20.84 31.25 18.06 27.08
8.0 66.67 38.47 22.23 33.34 19.27 28.88
9.0 75.00 43.27 25.01 37.50 21.68 32.49
10.0 83.34 48.08 27.79 41.67 24.09 36.11
12.0 100.00 57.70 33.25 50.00 28.90 43.33
14.0 116.67 67.31 38.91 58.33 33.72 50.54
15.0 125.00 72.12 41.69 62.50 36.13 54.16
18.0 150.00 86.54 50.02 75.00 43.35 64.99
20.0 166.67 96.16 55.58 83.34 48.17 72.21
24.0 200.00 115.39 66.69 100.00 57.80 86.65
25.0 208.34 120.20 69.48 104.17 60.21 90.26
30.0 250.00 144.23 83.37 125.00 72.25 108.31
35.0 291.67 168.27 97.27 145.84 84.30 126.36
40.0 333.34 192.31 111.16 166.67 96.34 144.41
45.0 375.00 216.35 125.06 187.50 108.38 162.46
50.0 416.67 240.39 138.95 208.34 120.43 180.51
55.0 458.34 264.43 152.85 229.17 132.47 198.56
60.0 500.00 288.47 166.75 250.00 144.51 216.61
Electric Current Table