It is so frustrating to me to after watching this channel and learning a lot to find so many design flaws in so many newer buildings I go to (it’s obvious the calcs. Are wrong) one building didn’t calculate for cold air return through the bathroom doors and there having two outside walls, the lobby has a huge cold are return so all the heat stays in the lobby and the bathrooms are freezing. And to make matters worse the registers in the bathrooms are near the door no where near the outside walls! Woman wont even use the last stall! We might have to put a heated seat in there😂
@crhees9 ай бұрын
Alex Meaney brought up a wonderful comment about thermal mass and the exterior of buildings; especially in climate zones with large temp swings. Very interesting to think about brick or block vs wood or vinyl. Alex is all ways dropping little nuggets of wisdom that are simple in concept but deep. I really admire that guy. I could watch a 12hr stream of your wonderings, they're great. Also very interested in the Trueloads software. I am also struggling with the current software options and their dated calculations and difficulty with adding things like ERV's and makeup air.
@jko05269 ай бұрын
My new Mitsubishi heat pump kept up with -5 degrees weather(ave.) for about 5 days here in Wisconsin also but it raised my power bill by over $150 for the month! It’s the highest power usage that my home has experienced in the 16 years that we have lived here. Also Alex Meaney made a ton of sense! I wish I had talked with him before I made my HVAC purchase.
@Ariccio1239 ай бұрын
I am so glad go see mini splits with proper filters rather than rock catchers 👏👏
@johnwaugh86339 ай бұрын
That tool that looks for sound was pretty cool. Its crazy how useful even a reasonably priced thermal camera that plugged into my phone was when we were building out house.
@pyroman5909 ай бұрын
Always a treat when we get a peak inside Alex's great nerd brain!
@PandorasFolly9 ай бұрын
I have a former coworker who built a "geothermal air heat pump system". He came into possession through an auction hundreds of feet of very very large black pipe and metal corrugated pipe. He has it configured with two seperate air supply pipes(winter/summer) and a switch box next to the heat pump. He has a garage/barn with a large but low attic space. He packed it full of black plastic pipe. He runs air through an external filter that is a screen and a series of dust baffles and the air flow thru the pipe and out and down to the corrugated pipe buried 7 or 8 feet down. The metal pipe zig zags and then pops up next to his heat pump into switch box where heat pump pulls its air from. During the summer he has another longer metal pipe buried a little deeper that pops up in the same swtich box. And he switches back in forth. He added a solar fan so that during the summer the winter pipe continues to pull in hit air to try and warm up the soil.
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
Whoa very creative. That was a lot of weekends.
@PandorasFolly9 ай бұрын
@@HomePerformance yeah it was and he had free access to an excavator and his own tractor with a front end loader. If i remember correctly on a afternoon in late February the air he is getting out of the tubes is about 50-60 degrees warmer than ambient. Its kind of a better take on earth tubes passive air conditioning. Also we are in New Mexico so the lack of humidity helps and that we have pretty distinct seasons.
@TimothyNaugher9 ай бұрын
After tracking runtimes on projects where I did the Man J and the install, you really see how much Man J oversizes heating. There’s a bit of oversizing in cooling too but not near as bad as heating.
@zelozejn9 ай бұрын
Those acoustic imagers are amazing. As a side note: chewing when talking with someone looks really weird. :)
@mjcambron9 ай бұрын
I thought houses only lasted for a couple hundred years until I stayed at the Anchor Hotel in Saalfeld, Germany. The structure was built in 1486 and is still standing today.
@ronm65859 ай бұрын
Great info, thanks for sharing.
@BirchwoodBill9 ай бұрын
Adaptive control is not AI, neither is zoned control for hydronics. We keep our bedrooms a t 67F and baths at 72F - simple with hydronics. Time to up the game
@AaronHope_Sow9 ай бұрын
Our MultiZone Mitsubishi heat pump unit is definitely holding us down in central North Carolina. Coldest night this year was 14*F and the system didn't even blink. I did see it short cycle and freeze up once but I think it was a miscommunication with our Ecobee relays. Let the coil defrost and was back in business.
@trickstothetrades18019 ай бұрын
I hope that the future hold more controls like the one you showed that can adjust the system to be more flexible, then we might not have to assume so many calculations and get it wrong. The controls can take care of it and make up for human error. Well its a dream anyway
@ecospider59 ай бұрын
Near the end they talked about thermal mass. It made me think about the human thermal mass an heatstroke on day 3. If where you sleep is above 95 degrees then your body is gaining 0.5 to 2 degrees of extra body temperature each day that it can’t get rid of. So on day 3 when you wake up your body can be at 100 degrees still. That causes a huge risk of heatstroke on day 3 that was not there on day 1 and 2.
@TheDroppedAnchor9 ай бұрын
Seaborne mechanical equipment maintenance and operator since 1973; One of the single greatest advances was vibration/acoustic analyzing of motor/pump assemblies. That tiny green one shown left me speechless.
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
@droppedanchor3955 hell yeah man. Better more affordable tools for everyone!
@ZergZfTw9 ай бұрын
Just a few thoughts on the discussion about load calculations. First, it should take into account all the types of heat transfer, conduction, convection, and radiation. That means you need to know or assume all the relevant properties like specific heat capacity, density, emissivity, etc; even material structure matters; closed cell materials like high-density spray foam or EPS/XPS will always have an advantage in regards to convection over a fibrous material like Rockwool, or fiberglass. In fact, fibrous materials can have declining convection performance as the thickness increases. Second, you should look at the system dynamically. Hour by hour, at the very least. Modern computers are more than powerful enough to simulate a full year of heat transfer in a few minutes. You might not have the budget or time to do a full 3D FEA heat transfer and airflow analysis on every building, but I think doing a dynamic 1D simulation of a full year should be the standard, not just a one-point spot calculation like manual J. In my ideal world, the heat load simulation should output a model of the building that can output the exact room-by-room load at any possible combination of indoor and outdoor conditions. That model should then be fed into the building controls so that it can modulate all the equipment as needed to meet whatever conditions exist at the moment. We have been doing this type of model-based control in other industries like aerospace or chemical processing for decades at this point; there's really no reason it couldn't be done for HVAC.
@bent23319 ай бұрын
I love Alex Meaney. The man is an endless well of knowledge. Did you happen to check out the METUS booth? I'm trying to figure out when their new hyper heat sumo minisplits (MUZ-FW or is it FZ?) are coming out.
@InlogixEnterprisesАй бұрын
Love it: "Bacteria needs homes too"
@cokeiceeeee9 ай бұрын
will be interesting to see if your parents house can cool during design temperature day. If it does then it is a msicalculation in manual J or more input than recorded. If it doesnt then it was higher latent load.
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
We upsized the heat pump for cooling to get closer to heat load. Allowed in Manual S.
@tonythrasher41749 ай бұрын
I ducted my heat pump water heater from and back to the crawlspace of our home. This way we are cooling and dehumidifying the crawlspace anytime it’s running. Our crawlspace is not yet enclosed.
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
Oh boy, I wouldn't advise making the crawlspace even cooler than it already is- that's why mold and mildew is already such a problem down there from the sun never shining in.
@tonythrasher41749 ай бұрын
Mold grows fastest between 77°F and 86°F with relative humidity above 55%. It's worth noting that mold can survive at almost any temperature. Colder temperatures simply cause mold colonies to go dormant, which limits spore production
@steveedlund73578 ай бұрын
@@HomePerformanceCooler? By ducting isn’t he using the warmer condenser air into the crawl space? If in a warm climate, good winter-bad in summer?
@jeffk94058 ай бұрын
We just built a small 985 SF 2 bedroom cabin in the PNW. The building is framed, roofed and sided and we are planning on a 3 zone mini split system. One for the main part of the home and one in each bedroom. The smallest head unit available for the bedrooms seems to be 4000 BTU's. How will this affect the air conditioning side since the units are oversized for the space?
@HomePerformance8 ай бұрын
Get a dehu for sure
@boydbuck3779 ай бұрын
Hey Corbett - Good content but it raises a concern I have had for some time now. You have advocated for performing an accurate Manual J and making sure that the person doing the Manual J calculations is fully qualified. When you hire a consultant, you trust that they have the appropriate knowledge and experience in their field. That should include a full understanding of how the software acts upon the user provided input. Based on your discussion with Alex Meaney, do you believe that the Manual J software is incorrect? If so, how would you approach that discussion with a former, or even a new client? My Project is at the stage where a load calc needs to be done soon and I am wondering what to do…
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
It’s what we have to work with at the moment, Boyd- don’t worry, it still works, but it’s even more reason to avoid oversizing at all. The calc has the fat already built in.
@Tetter.9 ай бұрын
Awesome vid ty
@trickstothetrades18019 ай бұрын
Just a thought couldn’t they make the drain pans with a layer of copper in it to mitigate the bacterial growth? My wife said she has an idea that will only cost you pennies. Actually put pennies in the pan😂
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
Haha that would be too smart. Gotta make life hard or people will just skate by.
@TimothyNaugher9 ай бұрын
There is an old timers trick where if you have a short piece of left over copper after an install, you smash it flat with a hammer and set it in the drain pan.
@joshuaseaton70027 ай бұрын
I looked up that TPI Ultravision. 25,000.00 out the door. No thanks.
@Scott-cu4ol8 ай бұрын
what about Geo thermo
@zabidi599 ай бұрын
Do like to share this video please.
@online_screen_name9 ай бұрын
Appreciation for the video and insights. But getting rid of the gum in your mouth when filming so closely would make these more palatable
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
Probably yes. Hindsight 20/20.
@TheDroppedAnchor9 ай бұрын
Not to worry, not all of us are fixated on your mouth. 😂
@D2O29 ай бұрын
Non-engineers attempting to do engineering.....
@HomePerformance9 ай бұрын
Uh oh, you don’t want to know how far off base most engineers are about home HVAC
@D2O29 ай бұрын
@@HomePerformance As an engineer, I am very well versed in the deficiencies that exist in one operating outside their realm of expertise. As with most things in life, Not all engineers are created equal. If you truly understand how manual J came about, you will surely understand why you don't always get the accuracy you were expecting. Forget manual J, forget CLTD, CLF, SCL, TETD/TA these are ALL estimations/simplifications. If you want accuracy, use HB, TFM or RTS. IYKYK. The smaller your loads are, the larger effect inaccuracies have. Any input value not measured is a potential source of error. errors compound. Look to ASHRAE, not ACCA.