Realizing How the AC Altered How and Where We Live

Filed under: — Veteran at 7:50 am on Friday, January 27, 2012

One of the original applications of reducing room temperature in the United States happened when President James Garfield was dying. Navy engineers built a box-like structure that stored bed sheets saturated with nearly frozen water while a fan circulated the hot air overhead. The early air conditioner lowered the the in-room temperature by 20 degrees Fahrenheit but required half a a million pounds of ice in a couple of months. It just so happens that Friedrich ptac have been said to be a major factor for the metamorphosis of humid southern regions; and for most of us who have enjoyed its reduced room temperatures in the middle of searing hot spells, it is an innovation that is impossible to live without.

The utilization of steam to blow air around preheated coils led to the invention of the earliest heating systems to warm the air in manufacturing facilities. Developers began to envision reversing the process to blow air over cold coils to reduce the temperature of the air. In order to improve output on the factory floor, the new cooling machines circulated air across the cold condensers and thereby conditioned the air to limit the amount of water vapor the air would hold. Consequently, the workforce no longer had to tolerate long hours in parching municipal buildings, plants and shops. A predecessor to a modern wshp was the dehumidifier created by an U.S. inventor by the name of Willis Carrier for an American book printing firm. The first machine used chilled coils to reduce the humidity in the air with alterable controls.

Carrier’s dehumidifier technology had a considerable wallop in hastening productivity and our country’s workplace continued to expand to Southern regions. Air conditioner manufacturing plants rapidly formed to satisfy the expanding demand for cooling machines and McQuay replacement PTAC parts. From that point forward, air conditioning have continued to improve the conditions in homes and businesses. As workers moved to humid regions of the country, the demand for decreasing building temperatures became significant and engineers quickly began to understand the concept of chemically lowering ambient temperatures. Commercial development initiated a southern expansion that would seriously affect where Americans lived and worked.

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