Title: Heating and Air Conditioning I
1Heating and Air Conditioning I
- Principles of Heating, Ventilating and Air
Conditioning - R.H. Howell, H.J. Sauer, and W.J. Coad
- ASHRAE, 2005
basic textbook/reference material For ME 421 John
P. Renie Adjunct Professor Spring 2009
2Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- Properly engineered HVAC system must also be
economical - Compromise between performance and economic merit
- Selection due to
- Users needs
- Designers experience
- Local building codes
- First costs
- Most efficiency use of source energy
- Any of these may affect the choice among
choices given same results system with the
lowest-life cycle cost not necessarily the
lowest first-cost - Overall cost may be divided into two main
categories - Owning costs
- Operating costs
3Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- Overall cost may be divided into two main
categories - Owning costs
- Operating costs
- See Tables 10-1 and 10-2
- Also Chapter 36 of the ASHRAE Handbook HVAC
Applications
4Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- See Table 10-1 Owning and Operating Cost Data
Summary
5Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- See Table 10-1 Owning and Operating Cost Data
Summary
6Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- See Table 10-1 Owning and Operating Cost Data
Summary
7Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- See Table 10-2 Initial Cost Checklist
8Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- See Table 10-2 Initial Cost Checklist
9Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- General Concepts.
- Life-cycle costs consider expenses that are
experienced over an extended period. - Economic procedures project long-term costs so
that comparisons can be made between systems with
different initial and operating costs. - Must include all cost factors initial costs,
service life, interest, energy costs, operating
expenses, and cost escalation - Life-cycle cost techniques
- Present worth
- Uniform annual owning and operating costs
- Rate of return
- Rate of return of investment
- Benefit cost analysis
- Years to pay back
- Cash flow more sophisticated analysis need of
investors/owners
10Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Owning Costs.
- Expressed as annual costs that are distributed
over an extended period or as an equivalent total
value present worth (includes initial costs,
salvage value, property taxes, rents, and
insurance.) - Initial Costs
- Included construction costs of the system cost
of design, administration, and raise capital - Interest money has a true value because it most
be borrowed, obtained from investors, or diverted
(cost of borrowed capital, cost of capital, or
discount rate) - Time period used by owners and engineers to
analyze the system defined in the following
manner - Depreciation period allocated first cost over
the estimated useful life (IRS straight-line,
accelerated procedures such as declining balance
or sum of the years. ) - Amortization period time over which periodic
payments of monies are made to discharge a debt
11Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Owning Costs.
- Initial Costs
- Service life time value that reflects the
expected life of the specific component (not
useful life or the depreciation period used for
IRS) - High life is variable depends on maintenance,
environment, technical advancements of new
equipment, and personal opinions - Service life can be used to set amortization
period or help is decisions of preventive
maintenance - See Table 10-3 for Estimates of Service Lives of
Various Components - Capital recovery factor (CRF)
- Calculated from the established interest rate and
the amortization period n that determines the
uniform annual cost needed to repay a debt or
initial cost. - See Table 10-4 (1,000 at 8 percent for 20 years
CFR 0.10185, or 101.85 per year
12Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Owning Costs.
- Initial Costs (Amortization Table)
13Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
14Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
15Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Owning Costs.
- Initial Costs
- Present worth initial cash required (or present
worth) is the current value of monies to be spent
over the selected amortization period money
needed today for initial investment and all
future expenditures. - Present worth factor, uniform annual series
(PWuas) given in tables and is used to
calculate the present worth when given a uniform
annual cost. - PW Annual costs x PWuas (or 1/CFR)
- Series compounded amount factor, uniform annual
series (SCAF) used to determine a future sum of
money when a uniform annual payment is made. - Actual sum Annual costs x SCAF
- 1/SCAF is the sinking fund factor (SFF)
- Annual costs Actual sum at end x SFF
16Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Owning Costs.
- Present worth factor, single payment (PWFsp)
used to calculate the present worth of a future
one-time payment - Actual cost times this number gives the present
worth of a one-time cost, such as an overhaul or
equipment replacement. - Reciprocal is referred to as the compound amount
factor, single payment.
17Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Owning Costs.
- Property Tax
- Included as an owning tax and is a percentage of
the market value of the buildings - Engineer needs to assess whether appreciation or
depreciate of property values will occur. - Incentives for energy conservation may be an
important consideration in determining
justifiable long-term investment - Insurance
- Means by which a property owner can be reimbursed
for a financial loss from property damage that
requires repair or replacement - Financial recovery also from loss of income,
rents, or profits resulting from the property
damage - State-wide regulation (premium, liabilities,
deductibles, etc.) - Salvage Value
- Terminal value of the equipment at the end of the
life or amortization period often assumed to be
zero
18Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Operating Costs.
- Energy
- Utility costs require monthly calculation
considering energy consumption and peak demands. - Most reliable are hourly procedures each
component as a function of weather, internal
loads, building heat gains and losses and
ventilation - Cost escalation loss of purchasing power due to
inflation - Real return difference between interest and
inflation (1 to 5) - Present worth of an annual cost over a selected
time period, n, using an interest of money, I,
and a cost escalation, j, is the present worth
escalation factor (PWEF) when interest and fuel
cost rises are not equal use
19Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Operating Costs.
- Energy costs
20Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Operating Costs.
- Energy costs
21Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Operating Costs.
- Maintenance
- Expenses for labor and material necessary to make
repairs, as well as for cleaning, painting,
inspection, testing, etc. - Usually operation engineer handles routine
maintenance - Extraordinary repairs covered by maintenance
divisions - Technique for estimating building HVAC
maintenance cost for various equipment
combinations (Dohrmann and Alereza 1986) - Assume that the base HVAC system consists of
fire-tube boilers for heating equipment,
centrifugal chillers for cooling,
variable-air-volume (VAV) distribution. - Costs are 0.3338 per square foot with adjustment
from Table 10-5 to account for building age and
various types of HVAC equipment.
22Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Operating Costs.
- Maintenance (Table 10-5)
23Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Operating Costs.
- Labor for Operations
- System operators are often necessary due to scope
of facility or local regulation - Water Costs
- Heat can be rejected either through purchased
water or cooling towers - Water conservation
- Water Treatment
- Income Tax
- Can be considered as an operating cost
- Tax rate is the marginal rate next dollar
- Allowances for depreciation and other deductions
strongly influence investments by reducing
life-cycle costs - Significant tax-credits should be included in
life-cycle costs.
24Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Life-Cycle Cost Techniques.
- Present Worth
- Most common technique comparing the equivalent
cash needed on hand to own and operate over an
entire selected time. single investment dollar
amount.
25Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Life-Cycle Cost Techniques.
- Uniform Annual Owning and Operating Costs
- Compares the cost of both investment and annual
costs on an annual base spread the costs of
owning the building spread over the full
amortization period - Consider the additional costs at some particular
point in its life due to replacements or major
overhauls. - Rate of Return
- The average annual net benefit/original cost x
100.
26Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Life-Cycle Cost Techniques.
- Rate of Return
- The average annual net benefit/original cost x
100.
27Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Life-Cycle Cost Techniques.
- Benefit/Cost Analysis
- Comparative procedure that provides the engineer
and owner the ratio of cost versus savings
after both have been converted to present worth.
28Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Life-Cycle Cost Techniques.
- Years to Payback
- Similar to benefit cost analysis in that it does
not look for system cost comparisons at a
specific life agreement between engineer and
owner that YTP is reasonable and less than life
expectancy - Years required for the present worth of the
investment is equal to the savings.
29Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Life-Cycle Cost Techniques.
- Years to Payback
30Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Life-Cycle Cost Techniques.
- Cash Flow
- A discounted cash flow approach provides the
owner with a technique to incorporate variable
annual outlays and taxes, with the amount and
year of the cash income. - To account for interest and time, net cash flows
are converted to single-payment present worths
the interest at which the summations of present
worth of net cash flow is zero gives the rate of
return. - If acceptable to the investor proposal should
be approved. - Another way would be to obtain an investment
value at a given rate of return by adding the
present worth of the net cash flows, but not
including the investment costs.
31Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
32Chapter 10 Life-Cycle Costs
- Household Energy Use
- (from Energy and the Environment, 2nd
Edition, Ristinen and Kraushaar, 2006, John Wiley)