accuris store logo
  • Browse all
  • 3A
  • 9000
  • A3
  • A4A
  • AA
  • AAMI
  • AASHTO
  • AATCC
  • ABCB
  • ABMA
  • ABMA-BOILER
  • ACC
  • ACGIH
  • ACI
  • ADA
  • ADS
  • AEIC
  • AENOR
  • AES
  • AFCEN
  • AGA
  • AGMA
  • AHAM
  • AHP
  • AHRI
  • AIA
  • AIAA
  • AICHE
  • AIHA
  • AIIM
  • AISC
  • ALI
  • ALPEMA
  • AMCA
  • ANS
  • ANSI
  • ANSI/ANSLG
  • ANSI/NEMA
  • ANSI/TCNA
  • ANSI/UAMA
  • API
  • APWA
  • AREMA
  • ARINC
  • ARMY
  • AS
  • ASA
  • ASABE
  • ASCE
  • ASD-STAN prEN
  • ASHE
  • ASHRAE
  • ASIS
  • ASM
  • ASME
  • ASNT
  • ASQ
  • ASSE (Plumbing)
  • ASSP
  • ASTM
  • ATIS
  • AVIXA
  • AWC
  • AWI
  • AWPA
  • AWS
  • AWWA
  • B11
  • BHMA
  • BICSI
  • BIFMA
  • BioWorld
  • BMI
  • BS
  • CAN/CGSB
  • CAN/ULC
  • CEI
  • CFR
  • CGA
  • CGSB
  • CIE
  • CII
  • CISPR
  • CLSI
  • CMAA
  • CRANE
  • CRSI
  • CSA
  • CTA
  • CTI
  • DID
  • DIN
  • DNV
  • DOD
  • DOXPUB
  • DVS
  • ECIA
  • EEC
  • EEMUA
  • ESD
  • ETSI
  • FCI
  • FED
  • FM Approvals
  • FORD
  • FRPI
  • GMW
  • GPA
  • HEI
  • HFES
  • HI
  • HIR
  • HPS
  • I3A
  • IADC
  • IAPMO
  • IATA
  • ICAO
  • ICC
  • ICEA
  • ICML
  • IEC
  • IEEE
  • IEEE/UL
  • IES
  • IEST
  • IFI
  • IICRC
  • INCITS
  • INTERN
  • IPC
  • ISA
  • ISEA
  • ISO
  • ISO/IEC/IEEE
  • ISPE
  • ISTA
  • ISUZU
  • JEDEC
  • JIS
  • LIA
  • MBMA
  • MCGRAW-HILL
  • MIL
  • MPIF
  • MSS
  • NAAMM
  • NACE
  • NADCA
  • NAS
  • NASA
  • NBBI
  • NCSL
  • NECA
  • NEMA
  • NETA
  • NFPA (Fire)
  • NFPA (Fluid)
  • NFSI
  • NG
  • NGA
  • NISO
  • NORSOK
  • NRC
  • NSC
  • NSF
  • NZS
  • OPEI
  • PCI
  • PDA
  • PEI
  • PIA
  • PIP
  • PPI
  • RTCA
  • SAE
  • SAIA
  • SCTE
  • SDI
  • SES
  • SIA
  • SJI
  • SMACNA
  • SME
  • SMPTE
  • SN EN
  • SPC
  • SPI
  • SSPC
  • STI/SPFA
  • TAPPI
  • TCIA
  • TEMA
  • THHILL
  • TIA
  • TMS
  • UL
  • ULC
  • UOP
  • WILEY
  • WRC
  • X9
Publishers
Need Help?
Log in
Create Account
Cart

Your shopping cart is empty.

Log in or create account

  1. Home
  2. CH-99-17-2 (RP-926) -- Updated Design Guidelines for Snow Melting Systems

CH-99-17-2 (RP-926) -- Updated Design Guidelines for Snow Melting Systems ✓ Most Recent

1711107

Handbook / Manual / Guide by ASHRAE , 1999

James W. Ramsey, Ph.D.; Martha J. Hewett; Thomas H. Kuehn, Ph.D., P.E.; Sean D. Petersen

Track This

Full Description

This paper presents some of the results of the final report of ASHRAE research project 926, "Development of Snow Melting Load Design Algorithms and Data for Locations Around the World." The paper reviews and identifies recommended revisions to the current ASHRAE snow melting load calculation procedures and presents sample results based on the revised procedure. The load at the melting surface includes the heat fluxes needed to raise the snow to the melting temperature (sensible load) and to melt the snow, along with the heat losses due to convection, radiation, and evaporation. The changes in the calculation procedure are primarily in the way heat losses are determined. The convective heat transfer rate is evaluated using currently accepted correlations for the turbulent convection heat transfer coefficient. The radiation losses are evaluated using an effective sky temperature that is based on the ambient dry-bulb temperature, relative humidity, and fraction of the sky that is cloud covered. The analogy between mass and heat transfer is used to determine the water vapor mass transfer coefficient from the convective heat transfer coefficient. The convection and evaporation losses are functions of the wind speed and the characteristic dimension of the slab. Calculations are performed for a baseline case using the wind speed as reported on meteorological data and for a characteristic length of 20 ft (6.1 m). For a number of cases, calculations were also performed at combinations of half and twice the meteorological wind speed and for characteristic lengths of 20 ft and 5 ft (6.1 m and 1.5 m). The results are presented in the form of a sensitivity table of multipliers, which can be applied by the designer to the baseline. Using 12 years of weather data, loads were calculated for 46 U.S. locations. Results are presented in terms of frequency distributions that indicate the percentage of time that the required snow melting load does not exceed the reported value. Snow melting loads are reported for percentages of 75, 90, 95, 98, 99, and 100. A closer look at six of the sites demonstrates that for a given load requirement, the distribution of the load in terms of melting, convection, radiation, and evaporation varies greatly. The results clearly point out the need for concurrent data in order to accurately estimate snow melting loads.

Units: Dual

See more

Also Bought By Customers

  • 1711069

    CH-99-06-3 -- Underfloor Air Distribution Solutions for O...
    Priced From $16.00

  • 1711096

    CH-99-13-3 -- Teaching Students About Two-Dimensional Hea...
    Priced From $16.00

  • 1711109

    CH-99-18-4 -- A Robust Model-Based Approach to Diagnosing...
    Priced From $16.00

  • 1711113

    CH-99-19-3 -- The Use of Multipoint Monitoring as a Tool ...
    Priced From $16.00

Browse related products from ASHRAE

  • ASHRAE > Conferences > ASHRAE Conferences > 1999 Winter Conference, Chicago, IL > Transactions 1999, Vol. 105, pt. 1 > Symposium Papers

Order Options

Delivery Options
Price: $16.00
Available for Immediate Download

Product Details

Published:

1999

Number of Pages:

11

File Size:

1 file

Product Code(s):

D-7619

Note:

This product is restricted and cannot be purchased in the following countries Russia, Belarus
✕

Document Delivery Options

PDF
A Portable Document Format which is electronic and downloadable. All PDF's can be downloaded from your My Downloads page in your Accuris Store account. Refer to Help Center for more details.
✕

What is a Secured PDF?

Secured PDFs are equipped with Digital Rights Management (DRM) software, by request of the Publisher to protect the copyright of the Publication, preventing unauthorized duplication and distribution.

What does this mean?

To view the PDF, a DRM tool, FileOpen must be installed. FileOpen is a free plugin which is compatible with Adobe Acrobat Reader DC and Pro DC, as well as other PDF Readers noted on the FileOpen website.

What can you do with a Secured PDF?

  • Print (except for IADC, ICML)
  • Search
  • Highlight
  • Bookmark

Restrictions:

  • Some Publishers do not allow printing.
  • Most Publishers do not permit copy and pasting from the PDF.
  • Sharing, Duplicating and Distribution prohibited.
  • For further information on restrictions, please click here.

PRODUCTS & SERVICES

  1. BPVC 2025
  2. BPVC Previous Editions
  3. Engineering Workbench
  4. Track It

CUSTOMER CARE

  1. Help Center
  2. Glossary
  3. Search Tips

CONNECT WITH US

  1. Contact Us

COMPANY INFORMATION

  1. About Accuris
  2. Press
  • © Copyright 2026 ACCURIS
  • Privacy Policy
  • System Information
Device/OS: Unknown
Browser: Unknown Browser 0.0
User Agent: Mozilla/5.0 AppleWebKit/537.36 (KHTML, like Gecko; compatible; ClaudeBot/1.0; +claudebot@anthropic.com)
Store Name: css
Page: /standards/ch-99-17-2-rp-926-updated-design-guidelines-for-snow-melting-systems?product_id=1711107
Referrer: Direct Navigation
IP: 216.73.216.61
Language: en
Customer #: Not Logged In
Member?: NO
Cart #: 1463810332
Order #: None
Cookies: YES
×