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Duct Systems
Why is this the case? Well, it has to do with economics and investors. There's simply much more money in selling HVAC equipment that there is in sheet metal. The HVAC manufacturers therefore need to go to market to guess who... the HVAC contractors. It's not a bad thing, but most contractors are somehow led to believe the furnace they ally themselves with is oh-so important. Our goal isn't to minimize the importance of a good heating or cooling appliance but it is to stress how much more important a good duct system is. The problem is most duct systems are one or more of the following: undersized, bad design (not streamlined), leaky, and lack insulation in non-conditioned areas. Lets go through the items one by one: Undersized: Every duct
installed on the planet owns what's called a "Duct-U-Later" (sounds like
calculator). Just about all of those installers understand what 'should'
happen, but unfortunately theory and reality often don't see eye to eye.
Ducts are sized one of two ways: feet per second, (that is how fast the air
travels), or the second is known as "friction rate", which gets converted to
static pressure measured in inches of water column. I realize these
technical terms may sound scary. However, scary is a fitting expression for
what we see out there. If the ducts are too small, it causes the blower
motor to deliver less air. Less air means less energy transfer. Often times
well purposely down-size the furnace to A: better meet the match between
small duct system and new smaller furnace, and B: many of the
now-retired heating installers for whatever reason installed rather huge
capacity heating appliances back in the mid-part of the last century (well,
we still see oversized equipment today, but that's another page,
click over
to Manual J).
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