Air conditioning a home theater.


I have converted my den into a dedicated home theater and listening room. It is posted on Audiogon's Member Systems under Home Theater, Marc's Media Room Madness. The room is great but, since the warmer weather started, we discovered that our home's central air conditioning system is inadequate for cooling that room. Perhaps enclosing the previously open entrance to the room and the addition of carpeting and black out curtains is retaining heat more than before. There are various solutions. The two we are considering are to turn our central system into a zone system or install a "mini split" system. I would appreciate hearing from anyone who can weigh in on which system is more efficient and, most importantly, which one is quieter. Thanks.
marcgerber

Showing 1 response by nsgarch

Marc, a couple of questions:

1.) Was the room adequately cool and comfortable in past summers before the recent conversion? I'm guessing 'yes', because . . . . . . .

2.) There appears to be a fairly large supply register on the wall above your TV. Is there a return air register somewhere else in the room? I'm guessing 'no' because . . . . . . .

3.) The supply air probably originally found its way back to the A/C fan through the (now closed up) opening, via a return air grill somewhere else in the house (a central location, like the hallway.) Am I correct?

If I am correct, you need to 'uncork' the room in some way, because the supply register is now trying to 'pressurize' the room, and it cant, so little or nothing comes out of it. There are a number of ways to fix this, and I'd be happy to list them, but here's one that (after looking at your setup) will both keep your room cooler AND keep any component heat out of the room (and keep the components cool too!):

If the closet behind your equipment has another wall (or door) which adjoins a space that has unobstructed access to the main return air register (like the hallway), then all you need to do is install a "transfer grill" in that wall, preferably up high, or above the closet door, so hot air won't collect in the closet. (A transfer grill is just a hole in the wall with a grill on each side to dress up the hole.)

If that is not possible (no adjoining wall in the closet) but there's an attic space above the closet, then install a grill in the ceiling of the closet and run a duct from that grill to the main return duct of your system. It will work just as well, but will cost a little more.

(Make sure any return air grill and duct have at least 1.5x the area of the supply grill and duct.)

Anyway you should be able to do some version of this, and it should solve the problem. With the additional feature that your components will be cooled and won't add any extra heat to to room.

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