Webinar
Today’s Packaged Rooftop Systems Applied to Yesterday’s Installations
This webinar will focus on today’s advanced packaged rooftop equipment when they’re placed in older installations. What should you consider? What are the best recommendations from systems experts?
Webinar Details
- Date
- Duration
- 1 hour
Quick Facts
- Topics
- Engineer & Architect • Contractor
Just as we’ve seen cassette tapes give way to CD’s and CD’s give way to streaming through Bluetooth, the HVAC industry is seeing similar step function changes in systems technologies. Although much of the innovation is driven by regulatory changes, this path to compliance often yields the development of more advanced equipment and unit controls, or better yet, systems that are “ready for today.”
This webinar will focus on today’s advanced packaged rooftop equipment when they’re placed in older installations. What should you consider? What are the best recommendations from systems experts? What can engineers, contractors, operators, and owners expect as the HVAC industry journeys down this new technology path?
Key Learnings:
- Overview of the Department of Energy’s minimum efficiency changes and performance metrics
- Understand how controls technology advancements bring serviceability, flexibility, and connectivity improvements (and sometimes challenges) to engineers and installing contractors
- How these technology advancements help HVAC manufacturers gain efficiencies
- How changes from constant volume to multi-speed and variable speed affect system design, operation, and installation
- We’ll break the myth: “Constant volume is required in hospitals and in hurricane shelters.”
Speaker
-
Christopher Williams
Christopher is a Senior Engineer with Trane Technologies Unitary Applications Engineering. A graduate of Texas Tech University, with 25 years of industry experience, he has served in a multitude of roles including project execution, sales, operations leadership, and counselor-based solutions. Working with fellow team members he combines his engineering knowledge and many years of field experience to help Trane offices understand the correct HVAC system choice, their strengths, and their weaknesses. Christopher is recently received the ASHRAE Distinguished Service Award and is Chair of ASHRAE SGPC 41 Guideline for Variable Refrigerant Flow. He is also a voting member of ASHRAE SSPC 15 Refrigerant Safety, SSPC 147 Release of Refrigerants, TC 8.7 VRF, and TC 10.3 Refrigerant Piping. In addition to ASHRAE Christopher has served with the AHRI Ductless Engineering Committee. Christopher and his family reside near Clarksville, Tennessee. Christopher is very active with the Boy Scouts of America. With his children’s help they are raising a non-hunting beagle, free-loading chickens, and a mess of petulant honeybees.
-
Chris Gist
Chris is the controls product manager based out of St. Paul, Minnesota. He has been involved in the development, installation, and support of HVAC system controls for Trane since 2003. His areas of expertise are in chillers, air handling units, packaged unitary equipment, and energy management. As the controls product manager, Chris has responsibility for controls on Trane’s air cooled chillers, water chillers, and packaged unitary HVAC products across North America.