a/c capacity in "tonnage"
Well thanks for that, Alfred! I didn't invent the term nor determine its origin. And though you may not like its origin with melting ice, how peculiar is its counterpart, "British Thermal Units"? I mean, seriously? How do the French feel about that? (Most Americans know BTU as BTU not as British Thermal Units).
Nobody uses a ton of ice in determining anything any longer, he says while laughing, but the units of measurement remain. All the load calculations done are based on how much heat you need to remove. And all the parts are the same whether in a car or a house: compressor, condenser, evaporator, liquid line, vapor line, and a few other parts tying them together and making them work and play nice together.
The bottom line is tonnage, BTU/Hr, are all standard units of measurement for heating and cooling. For automotive compressors, the compressors are generally
specified in "displacement", and then kW on a curve chart. One ton of refrigeration capacity = 12,000 BTU/Hr = 3.5 kW. Unlike residential or commercial a/c units which generally operate at a fixed rate (unless you're talking about two stage but let's not go there) automotive operate at quite a variance. A small Sanden automotive piston compressor, at higher RPM, is capable of over 6 kW. Like it or not, that's over 20,000 BTU/Hr, or 1.6 tons. That's enough for a small home. It's capacity is seriously reduced at idle speed.
But, because you were dwelling on quaint terminology, you missed the point on this.
a/c consumes a lot of electricity. Cars like a Tesla have electric a/c compressors, but they also have massive batteries and electrical capacity to run them. Our cars do not. It takes a lot of electricity to cool even a small car...and I would question whether or not our standard battery and standard alternator could keep up with the electric demands of a properly sized electric a/c unit.
I had two Ford Fusion plug in hybrids from 2015-2017. Though plug in, they were true hybrids, with 4-cylinder Atkinson cycle gas engines. When freshly charged they had a stated 18 mile range before the gas engine would kick in. Turn on the a/c, and you couldn't go a mile without that range dropping precipitously. For the most part, you were using gas most of the time, since it is rare in Michigan not to need either heat or a/c in a car.