What’s the difference between BTU and CFM when comparing air conditioners

air-conditioning

I'm looking at GE in-window air conditioners. Based on research and room size I've determined a 10,000BTU unit will be best.

My next concern is the loudness of the machine. This led me to two models.
The AED10AV and the AEM10AV. There is only one major difference between the two. The AED lists 230 CFM and the AEM lists 300 CFM.

air conditioner comparison

My problem is understanding how CFM and BTU don't seemed to be linked. Isn't cooling power (British Thermal Units) a function of the amount of air blown (Cubic Feet per Minute)?

Best Answer

They have almost nothing to do with each other.

BTU describes the actual cooling power.

CFM simply describes how fast it moves the working fluid (the air) through the system, and CFM does not matter for differences that small. Suppose you order water and one vendor supplies four 3-gallon jugs and the other supplies three 4-gallon jugs. Not a difference enough to care about.

Noise has nothing to do with either one, and everything to do with the acoustics of the machine, shape and design of the blowers, and isolation of machinery. Slightly more air volume matters little by comparison.