Regular HVAC Maintenance
Over time, the efficiency of electric air conditioners and heat pumps degrades due to dirty coils, refrigerant charge drift, fouled filters, and worn components. A professional tune-up restores much of this lost performance. This measure quantifies the energy and demand savings from servicing electric-powered cooling and heat pump equipment that has not received a tune-up in the previous three years. It applies to central A/C systems and heat pumps of 20 tons or less, and requires each unit's rated capacity, efficiency ratings, and equivalent full-load hours.
ARC Code(s):
- 2.7211 (Clean and Maintain Refrigerant, Condensers, and Cooling Towers)
Savings Calculation
Savings are driven by the improvement factor, which expresses the fractional efficiency gain a tune-up delivers. It is applied to the unit's annual cooling (and, for heat pumps, heating) energy use.
where:
-
\(F_{\text{improv}}\) = fractional improvement from the tune-up (unitless)
-
\(\eta_{\text{post}}\) = post-tune-up efficiency rating — SEER, SEER2, IEER, EER, or HSPF as applicable
-
\(\eta_{\text{baseline}}\) = baseline (pre-tune-up) efficiency rating in the same metric
Default improvement factor when ratings are unknown
When pre- and post-tune-up ratings cannot be measured, build \(F_{\text{improv}}\) from NJ TRM Table 3-178 by summing the percent savings for each maintenance component performed:
| Maintenance component | % savings |
|---|---|
| Condenser cleaning | 6.10 |
| Evaporator cleaning | 0.22 |
| Refrigerant charge offset ≤ 20% | 0.68 |
| Refrigerant charge offset > 20% | 8.44 |
Typically, we'll assume the first three rows of this table apply if the unit has not had a tune-up in the previous 2 years.
Annual Energy Savings
Total electric savings combine the cooling component (all units) and the heating component (heat pumps only):
where:
-
\(\Delta \text{kWh}_{\text{cool}}\) = annual cooling energy savings (kWh/yr)
-
\(\Delta \text{kWh}_{\text{heat}}\) = annual heating energy savings, heat pumps only (kWh/yr)
-
\(\text{CAP}_{\text{cool}}\), \(\text{CAP}_{\text{heat}}\) = rated cooling and heating capacity (kBTU/hr)
-
\(\text{EFLH}_{\text{cool}}\), \(\text{EFLH}_{\text{heat}}\) = equivalent full-load cooling and heating hours (hrs/yr)
-
\(\eta_{\text{cool,baseline}}\) = baseline cooling efficiency rating — SEER, SEER2, or IEER, whichever matches the unit's nameplate (use IEER for rooftop units rated above 65,000 BTU/hr)
-
\(\text{HSPF}_{\text{baseline}}\) = baseline heating efficiency rating
Choosing the cooling efficiency metric
Use the metric the unit is actually rated in, and keep \(\eta_{\text{post}}\) and \(\eta_{\text{baseline}}\) in that same metric. SEER and SEER2 are reported for smaller, single-phase equipment; larger commercial rooftop units (RTUs) rated above 65,000 BTU/hr are rated by IEER (or EER), so prefer IEER for those. Do not mix metrics — a SEER baseline against an IEER post-tune-up rating will produce a meaningless improvement factor.
Peak Demand Savings
The cooling load drives the summer peak, so demand savings — for both air conditioners and heat pumps — use the cooling capacity, the baseline EER, and the electric coincidence factor:
where \(\text{EER}_{\text{baseline}}\) is the baseline cooling efficiency rating and \(\text{CF} = 0.478\) is the electric coincidence factor. Because the demand reduction is driven by cooling, no winter peak demand is claimed (\(\Delta \text{kW}_{\text{winter}} = 0\)).
Annual Cost Savings
where:
-
\(R_c\) = facility consumption rate ($/kWh)
-
\(R_d\) = facility demand rate ($/kW-month)
Anticipated Costs
The exact cost of a tune-up is difficult to determine without quotes from local contractors, so use the allowance method for an estimate. Multiply the appropriate per-unit allowance by the number of units serviced:
| Unit size | Mounting | Allowance |
|---|---|---|
| 5 tons or more | Ground-mounted | $175 / unit |
| 5 tons or more | Rooftop | $225 / unit |
| Less than 5 tons | Any | $125 / unit |