
Residents of California, Arizona, and Nevada dont need a weather forecast to know how oppressively hot it can get. During the seemingly endless summers, air conditioners are strained to keep the house cool and comfortable. The right kind of glass can make a big difference.
SureGuard has long known that LoEČ, a highly efficient coated glass, can help slash summer heat gain through windows, which in turn means substantial energy savings, but SureGuard wanted to see it. SureGuard looked at a study taken with identical tract homes in Roseville, California, a bedroom community near Sacramento.
One house was outfitted with LoEČ, while the other retained ordinary clear 2-pane glass. The houses were unoccupied but equipped with electrical heaters that simulated normal occupancy. They also had on-site monitoring equipment that tested indoor and outdoor temperature and humidity, furnace and air conditioner energy consumption, and other important factors. The results conclusively show that LoEČ can cut energy costs, make homes more comfortable, and even reduce pollution in the environment. Clearly, LoEČ is no ordinary glass.
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- Vinyl frame windows
- 17% window-to-floor area ratio
- AC Capacity: 3.5 tons for 2-pane clear house, 2.5 tons for LoEČ house
- Air/duct leakage and thermostat calibration tested and balanced
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Windows are the single largest factor in a homes cooling load. Cardinal has now gathered two years worth of data from Roseville, which offers unequivocal evidence of the energy savings offered by LoEČ. In contrast to the home with 2-pane clear glass, LoEČ cut solar heat gain by more than 50%. In the house with LoEČ, measured a remarkable 27% savings on cooling costs.
Energy savings extended to the winter time as well. The LoEČ house saved 10% on the heating bill when compared to the house with regular clear glass.
The stellar energy performance of LoEČ means that a smaller air conditioner can be used to cool the same space.We found that the combination of LoEČ and a smaller air conditioning unit with an increased Seasonal Energy Efficiency Ratio (SEER) can save 35% annually on heating and cooling costs.
For the builder, this is the lowest cost, most highly efficient upgrade available.
For the homeowner, that can mean an average energy savings of $12,000 over thirty years (assuming a 2% year-over-year increase in energy rates.)
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The extensive research with its test houses in Roseville has already demonstrated the energy savings that can by achieved by using LoEČ, but thats not the only benefit.
Currently, there are roughly a quarter of a million new homes built every year in California, Arizona, and Nevada. Based on the demonstrated savings produced by LoEČ in Roseville, we project that if all new windows in this region used low solar gain glass rather than clear, the energy savings would equal 1 billion kilowatt hours per year. The peak load savings equate to building one new 400 Megawatt power plant every year.*
What does this mean for the region in practical terms? Accumulated over 10 years of new home construction:
- Homeowners would save $5 billion dollars on their electric bills.
- Peak load savings would have the same effect as adding more than 5% to the existing total electrical generation capacity.
- Air pollution savings would equate to shutting down all power plants for the next 3 months.
While each homeowner will enjoy a measurable savings in their energy bill, the cumulative effects mean cleaner air for everyone and increased reliability of electrical supplies into the future.
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The American Society of Heating, Refrigeration and Air Conditioning Engineers has developed standards to rate the thermal comfort of an indoor environment. ASHRAE Standard 55 defines an environment as acceptable when 80% of the occupants are comfortable.
Using the measured temperatures from the Roseville test homes, the charts below show how dramatic the improvement in comfort is with LoEČ. Even with direct sunlight shining in, the home with LoEČ will feel more pleasant than the clear glass house with the shades drawn. To develop a comparable comfort level in the clear glass house, the homeowner would have to lower the cooling thermostat setting by 4°F or more. Set for equal comfort, the energy analyses show that the measured savings of 25% for LoEČ would now increase to nearly 40%!
LoEČ offers energy savings, pollution reduction, and improved comfort when compared to ordinary clear 2-pane glass. Roseville project is the proof.
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