Dear Forum, I have had clients in the past who refused to place HVAC equipment on the roof in Dallas, Texas because they knew the near-roof temperatures were much warmer than the temperature farther away. The situations have been for large, black roofs which get very warm in the summer. I have not thought about that much for energy models other than defining high SRI roofing materials. Yesterday, however, I was talking to an infrared thermal imaging professional who says that he has measured roof temperatures that were 100F / 56C higher(!) than the nominal outdoor temperature. If that is true, then all of my energy calculations for rooftop equipment are WRONG � not a happy thought for someone who wants results that are realistic. The resulting questions to the most knowledgeable modeling community in the world (as far as I can tell) are: · Are you aware of research which has measured or characterized near-roof temperatures? · Do you have a modeling practice that accounts for the near-roof impact on outdoor air intakes or roof-mounted chillers, condensing units or cooling towers? Thanks in advance for your insights! James V Dirkes II, PE, BEMP, LEED AP From: EnergyPlus_Support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx [mailto:EnergyPlus_Support@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx] Thank you very much for you help Kind Regards, Felipe Durán __._,_.___ Posted by: Jim Dirkes <jim@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx> Primary EnergyPlus support is found at: http://energyplus.helpserve.com or send a message to energyplus-support@xxxxxxxx The primary EnergyPlus web site is found at: http://www.energyplus.gov The group web site is: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/EnergyPlus_Support/ Attachments are currently allowed but be mindful that not everyone has a high speed connection. Limit attachments to small files. EnergyPlus Documentation is searchable. Open EPlusMainMenu.pdf under the Documentation link and press the "search" button. __,_._,___ |