Posts Tagged ‘blower door’

DIY: Home Energy Audit -The Building as a System

Thursday, June 30th, 2011

Your house works as a system. When one part isn’t working properly, the whole house doesn’t function correctly.

Remember when I said when mama isn’t happy, nobody is happy? This is pretty true for the house as a system, too. It is like when the air conditioner isn’t size properly, and it is pushing too much air out or when there is a gaping hole in the basement and air is escaping through it, and you don’t understand why it is always cold right above that spot in the dead of Winter… See- your house is a system, and it knows when something is awry. Conducting your systems check during your home energy audit will help address these issues! Here are some of the features you need to look at to ensure that your home functions as a healthy system when you do your own home energy audit.  You may have heard about people having Home Energy Raters(HERS) crawling around their houses with sophisticated tools and equipment blowing smoke here and there and everywhere, what is this stuff even doing anyway? Well, more than likely, these energy auditors are testing to see where there is air leakage from the home to outside of the home. We call this air leakage to the outside of the envelope. Let’s identify some of these things so you know what we’re talking about moving forward:

Thermal Envelope- The great people from the City of Seattle framed it quite nicely when they put together a really awesome DIY home energy audit package a few years back. We totally agree with them that “the first step in an energy audit is to understand where the boundary is between the heated and un-heated spaces in your home. This boundary is called the building enclosure, or shell. It includes the walls, ceilings and floors between the inside and the outside, as well as those between heated and un-heated spaces, such as a garage or basement. In a simply shaped home it may include just four walls, a ceiling and floor, but most homes are more complex. A heated floor becomes a porch floor, or a side attic connects to a wall. Bay windows have tops and bottoms, and skylight wells must be insulated, too. It may help to make a sketch similar to the one shown, identifying the specific configuration of your home.”

Air Leakage- This is super important to take a look at since air leakage accounts for much of our energy loss in our homes,- they say more than 1/3 of our energy loss if through air leakage!  “Since warm air rises, a heated home in winter acts like a big chimney. As the warm air rises and escapes through ceiling penetrations, cold air is pulled in from the basement, garage, or crawl space. The cold air can bring dust or pollutants with it as well as make our homes more dry, since moisture escapes with the warm air and the cold air coming in lowers the humidity in the space. Any penetration in the building shell will result in air leakage. Along with doors and windows, obvious places where cold outside air enters a home are penetrations for heating ducts, water pipes, sewer stacks, wiring, lighting fixtures, electrical switches and outlets, chimneys, ventilation fans, attic hatches, fireplaces and pet doors.”

Windows- Take a look around your window frames, make sure they are sealed with a nice continuous bead of caulk. Quite obviously, you will want your windows to be free of damage and cracks. Make note of any damage to your windows and feel for any drafts. If you need to weather strip the windows, now is the time to make note of this.

Doors Frames- Just like your windows, you want to feel around the frames for drafts. Check for any missing weatherstripping and make notes on what needs to be fixed or replaced. Make sure your doors don’t open to a room that is heated such as a garage or a room that can pull in toxic gases. This also goes for little doors for your pets.

Insulation- Talk about super-important for the thermal envelope! “Insulation slows the transfer of heat from the warm side to the cold side of a wall,ceiling or floor. Its purpose is to keep heat in during the winter and out during the summer. Placing insulation between living spaces and unheated areas produces a protective shell around your home. Insulation products are rated by their resistance to heat flow, called R-Value. The higher the number, the more effective the insulation and the lower your energy bills. Most homes in the United States built before the 1970’s are poorly insulated, if at all. Modern energy codes require minimum levels of insulation. To see if and how well your home is insulated you will be going to each area of your home’s envelope – walls, floors, ceilings – and looking at both the type of insulation installed and its thickness. Some areas may be easy to see, such as insulation in an
attic space. In other areas such as walls, you will need to probe behind the surface. If you are unable to determine the insulation type and/or depth, such as in a flat roof or cantilevered ceiling, professional insulation contractors and energy raters will be able to
investigate further with laser thermometers or an Infrared scanner. If your attic has no opening, you should make one yourself or have a contractor do it for you.”

Now that we’ve talked about what your preparations, your tools and now the house as a system, we’re going to look at the mechanical system of the house before we move on to how to inspect the spaces. We want you to be prepared to see what you’re going to see and know how it all operates together- as a happy little system! Stay tuned and let us know if you have any questions.

Do It Yourself: A Guide to Energy Audits

Thursday, June 2nd, 2011

Get some great tips over the next several months on how to do the basics of a home energy audit yourself! Starting…. NOW!

Not everyone has the time to have the Energy Audit man coming into their home, which is understandable, because the diagnostics take time. There is the visual inspection and the sit down talk about what all is going on and what you are experiencing, it is rather like going to a doctor’s appointment for your house- as it should be! Now, with this blog series, we are making  a few things available to you so that you can do them yourself in order for you to understand what is going on in your home! This should serve  to help save energy and create a healthier, more comfortable living environment. Over the next several months, we will provide you with some great tips and tools for starting a do it yourself energy audit process so you can be on your way to saving energy at home.

Some questions have probably popped into your mind already…

  • Why would you want to do an energy audit anyway?It is a great set of diagnostic tools for understanding where your home is loosing energy and how you can create actionable solutions for correcting the problems and start saving energy and effectively money!
  • What is with that big red door thing and that rather large fan? The blower door is that big red door with the fan, and it is really a big “tape measure for air.” We want to see how much air your home is leaking to the outside of the thermal envelope.
  • What does it all do? Combined, all of the tests- from the blower door to the duct blaster and everything in between- a home energy audit is looking to help the homeowner understand where energy is being lost and how it can be healthily kept in the home and functionally transferred throughout the home.
  • What is in it for you? When you are saving energy, you are saving money and you can also create a healthier, more comfortable living environment. Haven’t you heard when mama is happy- everybody is happy? That is totally what we want to see here! After we create the actionable plan to make the changes, you’ll totally understand what I mean by this if you don’t already! Don’t you want a healthier, more energy efficient home? I thought so…

Through this series, we’ll try to get into all of that and break it down, layman’s style… We hope you will stay tuned as we discuss some simple steps to getting started to doing your own home energy audit. You might not have all of the same fancy tools that we have, but you can definitely use your senses and gauge your comfort levels and when you’re ready to ask us questions, know that we’re here to help!

Happy do it yourself auditing! Stay tuned until next time, when we will be discussing the preparations, tools and safety tips that go into doing your own home energy audit.