tmurray
SAWHORSE
So, there are solutions, just the IRC doesn't make them mandatory.The IRC allows recirculator hoods, and hoods are not even a requirement in a SFR.
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So, there are solutions, just the IRC doesn't make them mandatory.The IRC allows recirculator hoods, and hoods are not even a requirement in a SFR.
Correct.So, there are solutions, just the IRC doesn't make them mandatory.
Slab on grade is inherently difficult since your volume to exposed surface area is so skewed. That why the code is slowly changing to equivalent leakage area. That's the only correct blower door number not ACH50.The hardest home to pass a Blower Door Test is a slab on grade.
Keep in mind that the BDT is measuring the square inches of open gaps to the outside of a home. If I'm running the BDT and you open a window, I can look at my CFM numbers on my manometer and tell you how far open you made that window.
The BDT is based on the volume (cubic Ft) of the entire thermal envelope of the home and the amount of CFM leaving it at -50PA.
Slab on grade has 1/2 the volume of a home with a standard basement, therefore has 1/2 the amount of allowable airflow for the BDT to pass.
Slab on grad also tends to punch the HVAC plenum through the ceiling and turn the ceiling into Swiss cheese with supply registers.
I tell builders when building slab on grade to put a bead of liquid flashing on both sides of the sill-seal foam gasket before the sill-plate is installed. This creates a much better bond and can be the difference between passing and failing. Without doing this method first, caulking around the entire interior perimeter of the home is the only way they've been able pass. This can be very ugly if the floors and baseboard have already been installed.
I often see zero air-sealing where the plenum exits into the attic through the ceiling, and I rarely see the supply resisters properly air-sealed to the floor of the attic. Unsealed flues and AC line-sets are also contributing to failures, in addition to bath-fans, walk-up attic stairs without thermal covers installed, poorly constructed attic hatches, plumbing/HVAC chases from the attic that lead all the way to the basement, and electrical penetrations left unsealed or sealed from the interior of the home not the attic-side.
Can-lights are also neglected often times as far as air-sealing is concerned.
The bond-joist in the basement is definitely one of the biggest sources for air-infiltration in a standard stick build home.
Insulation companies that flash batt the joist-ends and try to use can foam along the sill-plate have a hard time passing at 4<ach@-50Pa.
Some of this has to do with the quality of the framing too. If the drywall isn't sitting flush to the framing, all sorts of gaps happen along the wall-tops in the attic allowing attic air to infiltrate into the open wall cavities while running the BDT.
Electrical boxes and bathroom fans were the ones that I used to find all the time.
We are a heating climate, so vapour barrier goes on the inside. This is what is typically treated as the plane of air tightness in most buildings as well. We would do a great job of running vapour barrier around electrical boxes and bathroom fans, but forget to seal where the wiring and ductwork penetrated the vapour barrier.
We had a issue where a builder missed a vapour barrier inspection in a basement. It wasn't his fault. The future owner decided to hire people to go in and finish the basement while the house was under construction and did not communicate this at all with the builder (whole thing was wild). Anyway, we did an inspection with a thermal imaging camera and found really odd cold spot on the bottom half of an interior demising wall where it intersected the exterior wall on the walk-out side of the building. I got the builder to rip the sheetrock off one side so we could see what is going on and it was #3 in your list, along with a exterior hose bib.I can concur.
Also, we've been finding a lot of contractors not cluing into the requirement to
1) have vapour barrier run behind demising walls
2) have vapour barrier continuous through concrete slabs (although this is admittedly minor)
3) seal electrical wire penetrations through studs going into exterior walls/ceilings
4) have vapour barrier (air barrier) sealed to windows.
You can do that? Please elaborate.we did an inspection with a thermal imaging camera
Unlike how they are shown in the movies, thermal imaging cameras cannot see through walls. All they do is tell you the temperature of the surface using colour gradients.You can do that? Please elaborate.
I was just surprised that a municipal inspector would have this, that's all.Unlike how they are shown in the movies, thermal imaging cameras cannot see through walls. All they do is tell you the temperature of the surface using colour gradients.
We wait for a day with a large temperature difference between outside and inside (easier to see any issues). We do it very early in the morning before the sun comes up (prevents solar radiation from influencing readings).
Other than that, it just requires a moderate understanding of thermal bridging because you expect to see cold spots from structural components (studs, lintels, corners). If there are cold areas that are different than we would expect from thermal bridging, we open it up. Normally we would just find areas that didn't get sealed properly and had air infiltration/exfiltration.
To clarify, we didn't do this for contractors we hadn't worked with on a regular basis. Just contractors who normally did things right and we were just looking for things that got missed/forgotten. And we sure didn't do it with do-it-yourselfers.
Yes. I think at the time we were the only one in our province. Much larger jurisdictions were shocked when they found out, but our jurisdiction largely did not have an issue with buying staff the right tools to do a good job. We had an issue where a contractor blew up at staff and ended up complaining to council over us ordering the removal of sheetrock in a house. We were asked by council to evaluate other options and this was the outcome.I was just surprised that a municipal inspector would have this, that's all.
Contractors loved that thermal camera. A few told me if we needed another one and were having trouble to get funding, to let them know so they can explain to council how much time and money it has saved them. Best $1200 I ever spent as a department manager.
I was just surprised that a municipal inspector would have this, that's all.
The fire department has one. They provided a camera and a firefighter to operate it for us a couple of times when we askedI was just surprised that a municipal inspector would have this, that's all.
Designer called back about 15 minutes after I filed my report and started to ask questions about the source of the images and "was it calibrated." I explained, no, it wasn't .... but it was nonetheless indicative of decreasing temperatures. "The structural documents specified concrete being placed and cured according to CSA A23.1, and as I noted in the inspection report, it's up to the engineer - that's you - to verify that the heating remains in place per 7.2.2.2 .... Which usually means three days or 40 per cent per the table, and I don't think it meets that. I've covered our office's liability by bringing the data to your attention, it's your job to do the more exact measurements and the like. So now it's your call.... How will you proceed?"
Or the home owner/landlord will not repair the HRV or ERV units when they fail to operate.
In my opinion it is better to design systems that don't rely on mechanical and/or maintenance to make it last. This is the reason CA and many other states won't switch to the IPC. The UPC requires a system that works without reliance on parts that can fail.
If the response is not "thanks for the heads-up, I'm heading to site to check it out", my next call is to the engineering society. I think design professionals should check things out for themselves. If they have a different measurement than me, it's reasonable to have the "who's is more likely to be right" discussion. Attacking the concern before checking it out for themselves shows complete negligence for their duties under their association's by-laws.