Bryan teams up with Jesse to cover the important subject of sweating ducts, dripping vents and grilles and condensation on air conditioners.
Here are some other great sources for information on this topic
Videos from Retrotec on Blower Door and Duct Testing
https://retrotec.com/youtube/gallery/
The energy conservatory
https://energyconservatory.com/
Ultra-Aire Dehumidifiers
https://www.ultra-aire.com/
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Hey thanks for watching in this video we're going to talk about a category of problems that can really be quite serious and that is moisture issues on vents on ducts and on equipment. And so we see this as condensation, often we'll call it sweating ducts or a sweating vent, and the reason it's serious is because when you have condensation build-up, not only is the moisture in that location, a problem, because you can get some growth there, but it also Often represents a bigger humidity problem or a bigger, moisture problem that can lead to a lot of respiratory concerns. If you take a look at this chart, it shows that, within the conditioned space, we really want to keep our relative humidities between 40 and 55 percent. If we can, if at all possible, it creeps up into the may, be the low 60s that can be okay, but once we get any higher than that, that can be a challenge.

Not only do we want to keep things from condensating because that causes issues with growth, but we also want to think about the condition space and make sure that we keep our humidity under control. So again, we're gon na talk about three primary areas: sweating vents, sweating, ducts and then sweating equipment and, let's start with sweating vents, because that's the one that has the most to do with what's going on in the space itself. And so the reason why a grill or event diffuser, whatever you want to call it is gon na sweat, is because the temperature of that grill or diffuser or vent is hitting the dew point of the air. So there's really three different categories of things that can cause this problem.

The first and the easiest to fix is that you have humid air intrusion around the vent itself. So the first thing I suggest is remove the vent, look up inside and see if you can seal inside of that boot or can or whatever you happen to call it in your part of the country, see if you can seal around that area to prevent moist Air from making it in around that vent - and so that's a really easy and common thing. Sometimes you can use something like foam tape in there or maybe a little silicone or a little bit of acrylic latex caulk, maybe even a little mastic on the top side of that boot. You can seal that to the drywall or to the floor depending on.

If it's a floor or a ceiling vent, but a lot of times that will help solve that problem. If that is already taken care of, and you don't have issues with moist air intrusion around it. Well now you have to think about the temper of the vent, and you have to think about the dew point of the air in the space first thing to remember is that dew points can change as that air creates Stratus within a space. So if you have a really really high ceiling and that vent is sweating up at the ceiling level, you may have a different dew point air and down at the bottom, and that's something that sometimes you can solve with things like D stratification fans.

In order to help mix that air, so ventilation can help in some situations, but more than anything else, in order to prevent sweating vents, we really need to control the humidity in the space, and so, if you're, seeing relative humidities that are creeping up above fifty five Percent then the first thing to do is to control the humidity in the space. Now the tricky thing is is that in many cases, running lower fan, speeds running lower blower speeds, running less CFM over that of a protocol will result in colder air which will result in a lower temperature vent, which we tend to think. Well, that's gon na cause. More sweating, but also when we run lower air flow over that evaporator coil, more moisture, is removed from that air.
Therefore dropping the relative humidity in the space. It's something that we call sensible heat ratio or SHR when we run lower airflow over an evaporator coil. If the piece of equipment is functioning, the same meaning you're moving the same amount of refrigerant, then you're going to dehumidifies the air more because you're gon na have a colder coil, thereby changing your sensible heat ratio, meaning your sensible heat ratio is going to drop, sensible Heat is the change in temperature and latent heat removal is the moisture extracted from the air so, in other words, we're going to remove more latent heat by the equipment when we run lower fan speeds. But in a lot of cases, technicians are gon na go to a situation with a sweating vent and they're going to try to increase the fan speed and why are they gon na? Do that? They're gon na? Do that because they want to warm up the vent itself and that will result in warming up the vent when you run higher air speeds, you have higher air velocities higher air velocities means that you're gon na have warmer air and so by running warmer air.

A lot stands to reason that you're gon na have a warmer vent, but the problem is in doing that. You solve it on one side of the equation by warming up the vent, but you cause more of a problem on the other end, because you don't dehumidifier as well and in order for us to solve this problem, we have two ways of solving it: either reduce The humidity in the space, while keeping the vent temperature, essentially the same or warming up the vent temperature, while keeping the relative humidity in the space, essentially the same. My approach is to really approach it by reducing that relative humidity in the space. If the relative humidity is the problem which, generally speaking, that's what you're looking for so it's things like having a space that has high relative humidity, maybe because overall, the system is sized improperly it's oversized, so it's short cycling and not dehumidifying, or maybe you have customer Who's opening the doors into the space during cubed times, and so a lot of air is getting in that way.

Maybe they're cooking a lot in that area and so there's a lot of moisture from there. That's not being ventilated with a proper kitchen exhaust or maybe it's being recirculated into the space, or maybe they have something like a lot of cann lights, going into an unconditioned attic where that moist humid air is in filtrating into the space due to air leakiness. So you want to look at air leakage. You want to look at.
Are they running ventilation properly? Are they opening doors, all those sorts of things and a really great way to help solve this problem? Is a first? Do a blower door test to see how leaky is the space and there's a couple different techniques there if you're not familiar with how to do a blower door, that's a whole different video and we've done some of those videos as well. A couple of really great resources for learning more about that is looking at manufacturers of blower doors like retro tech and the energy conservatory, and then also Nate Adams. My friend Nate Adams has done a lot of really great discussions on this. We also did a podcast with geo meta in the past, where he talks about blower door.

So if you want to learn more about that, but what the blower door helps you learn is: is the space nice and tight, because when you have very leaky spaces, you're gon na tend to have more moisture, so that leakiness is a really big factor and moisture. Making it into the space so, when you're dealing with an issue of a sweating event, it's much easier to address it by keeping the moisture from getting into the space in the first place through proper ventilation and proper air sealing than it is to try to get It out, but if you've got no choice well, then you have to look at either. Resizing equipment may be adding dehumidification and maybe adjusting your settings on your equipment depending on the type of equipment that it is. But just know that if you reduce air flow going over that evaporator coil, you will dehumidifier, but you're still gon na have a colder vent and so now you're kind of in the same situation.

So generally, just changing fan speed on AC equipment usually isn't going to solve the issue of a sweating vent. But again it comes down to the dew point of the air and the temperature of that vent. If that vent hits that dew point temperature, then it's going to sweat a couple different devices that I suggest using to measure dew point, because a lot of people don't even know how to do that. My favorite is the psychrometer that comes in the field piece, JobLink kit, that's what we use most often that's a great psychrometer.

You can use the field, peace app or the measure quick app in order to get a relative, humidity, wet, bulb and dew point. You can also use the test. Oh 6:05. I, if you're using the test - Oh app, as shown in this screenshot here from the test - Oh app, it says TD and a lot of people, don't know what that is.

That is temperature dew points, so that TD means dew point. So that's an easy way for you to do it and then also uei makes it as part of their Hub 6 kit as part of their hub kit. They also make some really nice, AI kilometers, that you can use, but regardless in order to see what dew point is in a space, you have to use a good quality psychrometer. You have to let it acclimate to the space humidity and that's one of the really big starting points before you start diagnosing and figuring out exactly what to do.
First see where your relative humidity is in the space and then you can look at things like your. Maybe your vent surface temperature. Now that can be tricky to measure. Sometimes you can use an infrared thermometer if you get right up against it to measure the surface temperature of that vent.

But now you have to know a little bit about emissivity and all that and you have to know how to properly use infrared or thermal imaging and that's another skill that you need to. You can't just jump into it. You have to understand how that works or the way she'll get incorrect readings. But again, what we have to do is either control the temperature of the vent or control that relative humidity in the space and generally controlling the relative humidity in the space is your best bet.

Item number two is sweating ducts in an attic and so sweating ducts. In an attic is a completely different category of problem of attic, crawlspace basements, especially if those spaces are unconditioned or they're conditioned differently than the rest of the house, our insulation, currently in the attic we are at a seventy seven point, seven degree dew point. So any surface that gets below seventy seven point. Seven degrees will start to sweat.

So you know that air and the ductwork is, you know, gon na be 48 degrees or so and insulation r-value ductwork just isn't meeting it. So we kind of have two options: decreased, dewpoint or increase insulation going down into a cell down here, okay, so this addict has Ison along the top. They repented the top plates here, which of those shouldn't be vented, and then this space in the Attic needs to be controlled climate-controlled. So we need to determine if I and control the temperature in this space, but multiple Ridge vents they cut out, which is a really really poor design, given the fact that we're icing into everywhere here we have a five ton unit for upstairs a bypass damper based On static one zone here goes and feeds the master, suite and closet, bathroom, etc.

Our other zone comes off here and feeds the rest of the upstairs really high humidity. Upstairs I'm gon na get a in the Attic here. You can see we're coming sitting a bit here. Our units compensating sweating our secondary pans building up, and this is high high humidity up here.

Alright. So here we have an air handler inside of the attic, obviously ductwork inside of the attic as well. What we were experiencing was the unit would sweat so aggressively, because the cabinet itself was hitting dew point that the secondary pan would actually fill up with water periodically. Also ductwork, the exterior of the ductwork due to the high dew point, was also sweating pretty much everywhere.
What we did has we have i singing throughout the attic, so this is now a sealed attic. We use the ultra air s d12 dehumidifier in this particular application, and so it has a slight cooling factor to it, as well as incredible dehumidification ability. Currently, our relative humidity is 40 % and we are 71 degrees in the attic space. So this cabinet, this is the infinity series carrier.

So it's running in low speed, dehumidification! That's usually when you see the most issues as far as equipment, sweating or ductwork sweating and there's absolutely no moisture anywhere on ductwork on the equipment and this whole entire attic feels incredible again. We have ice anine throughout the attic. Sealing off all the vents, any porch areas and then no insulation, so all the insulation that was on the drywall traditionally got removed working amazing. So when you have situations like the video shown where you have ducts that are sweating in the attic there's two factors: there's the temperature of the surface of the duct itself and then there's the dew point in the attic.

It's not the temperature in the attics, not the wet, bulb temperature. It is the dew point in the attic, and one thing that you'll find often is that as an addict gets hotter, often the dew points get quite high, even if the relative humidity percentage is low. So, for example, I'm using the it's called the psycrow degree F app. That's way.

I know how to describe it, but I use this all the time in in place of using a psychometric chart just makes it nice and easy if you plug in a hundred and thirty degree, attic temperature, which is something we see in Florida. Quite often, even if you have a thirty five percent relative humidity in the ad in that attic, that is a dew point of ninety three point: five degrees Fahrenheit, which means that any surfaces in that attic they get two. Ninety three point: five or below are gon na start condensating and that's very easy for supply duct work to achieve that now, there's a couple different techniques you can use to solve this issue. You can use higher r-value supply, duct work or maybe rapid in something, like you know, double bubble's, some sort of uh, some sort of another insulation on top of that insulating properly is super important, and so, if you have gaps and insulation, obviously those will condensate water.

As that surface hits dew point a better way to deal with. This is to drop the dew point in the attic, and you can do this through ventilation in some cases. It's worse, if you have a sealed, moist environment - and this is especially made worse if things like dryer vents are leaking in the attic or venting into the attic, heaven forbid or bath fans are venting or leaking into the attic or kitchen exhaust. So that's something I always look at first, when I go into an attic that has any condensation in it, especially on the ducts, is, is moisture being added to this attic in some way, and then I look at.
Is it vented or unvented and if it's vented, but it's poorly vented, sometimes venting it better, can help a little bit when it comes to keeping that dew point lower because you better communicate with the outdoor air? Now I do not suggest using power vented attics and the reason why I don't is because, when you power vent in attic, you create negative pressure in the attic and often that will draw air from inside the house into the attic space and actually reduce the efficiency Of the home now this all comes down into you know, knowing your blower door number, knowing how leaky or tight your home is, and so there's some other factors here. But you definitely want to make sure that your attic is if it is a ventilated, attic and needs to be properly ventilated. Sometimes the only option to solve. The problem, though, is to seal the attic to make it into a non-ventilated attic, which is where you use.

Foams, like open cellar, closed cell phones, often called Ison een is a trade name for that, and so you seal the attic and then you D, humidifying condition the attic that's where we recently used an SD 12 from ultra air and a high-performance install that we did And we use that in order to dehumidifier and cool the attic slightly in order to bring it into the conditioned space and that dealt with that problem that you saw in that video from Jessi, where all the ducts were sweating. By sealing up that at it completely doing it properly and then conditioning it now that whole problem went away and the relative humidity and the attic came down, and also the relative humidity and the space came down, because if you have an attic that is leaky to The occupied space, but you seal it to the outside, and then you condition it really well with dehumidification, if you're in that type of market. That requires that, then that's also a great solution. It's it's a pricey solution, but it's a nice long-term solution.

That's gon na! Do a really good job of taking care of the problem. So when you have sweating ducts, your only options are: can you in some way increase the surface temperature of the duct, which you could also do by increasing air flow? But that is a dangerous equation, because when you increase air flow, especially when you already have a humidity problem now you reduce the ability of the air conditioning equipment to dehumidified and no matter what you do. Your air conditioner is probably gon na, be the best dehumidifier in your home as far as the amount of moisture that it can remove really good dehumidifiers are still often not gon na remove as much moisture as the air conditioner they're just gon na. Do it all the time and so properly sized air conditioning equipment help solve a lot of these problems, but again, when you reduce air flow, that's gon na create colder air inside the duct.
You're gon na have a lower velocity through the duct, which is going to create cooler, surface temperature on the duct. So if you have a situation where the system does have low air flow, this is the other side of this equation. If your system has low airflow because the duct system is installed improperly or it has a dirty of a protocol or a dirty blower wheel, or something like that, then that can sometimes be a fairly easy fix. You fix that air flow problem increase the airflow and then the surface temperature of the duct will warm up and it may stop sweating, but that's we're looking at the surface temperature of the duct as you can and looking at that attic dew point: that's where I Would always start whenever you have anything sweating in an attic or in a crawlspace or in a basement.

I often talk about addicts because in Florida that's what we've got. That's the place. You start is look at that dew point. Compare that to the temperature of the air in the duct and see what's going to be easier, is it gon na be easier to drop the dew point of the air in that attic or crawl space or basement, or is it going to be easier to somehow Warm up the surface of those ducts, quick pro tip here.

You're often gon na see the worst problems with sweating ducts in attics that are pretty well sealed, pretty well insulated and have some sort of radiant barrier and the reason is is because moisture tends to get trapped in those attics. So you have high overall moisture content and grains high relative humidities and low attic temperatures. When you have that low attic temperature. Now you don't have as much heat that's conducting into the duct itself and so that surface temperature gets cooler.

So now you have that kind of prime condition for sweating. On the surface of the duct, often really hot attics that are well ventilated. You won't have sweating ducts just because that heat conducts into that outer jacket of the duct itself, keeping it a little bit warmer driving in up above dew point, and so this is why, for those of you who have worked in hot humid environments like Florida for Years and most of your duct systems, don't sweat, older equipment, most sure duct systems aren't sweating all the time you may have some areas where the insulation is compressed, that they might sweat a little bit but generally they're, not sweating. That's because you have this very hot.

A very well ventilated, attic that now is actually heating up that surface jacket of the duct itself, keeping it above dew point it's often when we try to make things more energy-efficient when we're running lower fan speeds in order to dehumidified better in the space, you can Have these cases where the space itself inside the building is 50 percent relative humidity, but all the ducts and the Attic are sweating like crazy and that's why, when you have high-performance homes, I pretty much always suggest sealing up the attic bringing the ductwork into the conditioned Space by D humidifying that attic and now that kind of solves that problem, the final one that we see a lot in Florida is, we see sweating equipment. Now in Florida we generally have fan coils. We don't have a lot of furnaces, but same thing is true. In furnaces a lot of times, they'll take this equipment and they'll put it into a closet in an unconditioned space like, for example, a closet in a garage or even a closet in an area that may be conditioned, but it's not maybe kept as well conditioned.
Maybe a laundry room or something like that. Often these rooms will have gaps and cracks into the attic or maybe into the crawlspace. If that's where you are, and those gaps and cracks act as a gap for moisture to come up through those spaces. So, whenever you're putting an air handler in a closet or something like that, you need to make sure it's well sealed.

Now. Obviously, if you're, installing a furnace and 80 % furnace that has to communicate with the outside and so now kind of all bets are off. How are you gon na solve that problem, and so now you need to just make sure that it's as well-ventilated as you can. This is why, in Florida, though, we do see units wet and garages.

Sometimes we see the worst sweating, the worst condensation and enclosed spaces, because what occurs is is that moisture is allowed to get into these enclosed spaces? It gets trapped and then that air handler or coil radiantly cools that entire room, often that will create cold walls. That will then also condensate and build up growth. This is where sometimes you'll remove an air handler and you'll notice that there's all this growth right behind the air handler where it was next to the wall, and that's because that air handler is radiantly cooling, that wall dropping it below dewpoint and causing that moisture, and That growth, what I often suggest, if you're gon na, have them in enclosed spaces like this seal it off insulate it and condition it that's a better way, add a little return. Add a little supply better, yet use dehumidification, I'm a big fan of supplementary dehumidification, because then you can do it year-round, but in some way dehumidifier and control.

The dewpoint in this just remember that when we ventilate were stuck with whatever the outdoor dew points are, and in Florida we often have outdoor dew points that can reach 80 degrees. That's a very high dew point. That means anything under 80 is going to condensate, and so you really want to think about what your solution is gon na be. Is it ventilating better, so creating more ventilation more air to the outside, which could potentially have AI dew points, or is it better to seal insulate in condition and often ceiling, insulating and conditioning? Is the better is the better thing, but first always start with that? Sealing part that air sealing is often the solution, just like we mentioned with the sweating vents.
When you have that moisture, that's traveling and around the vent around the boot that can cause that vent to sweat, which is a big problem by controlling dewpoint inside the conditioned space and the relative humidity generally to that sort of in cooling mode 75 degrees. At 50 percent relative humidity, which equals 55 dew point, that's sort of the ideal condition for most people. Sometimes they wanted a little cooler than that, so that dew point may drop a little bit, but that 55 degree dew point is kind of a sweet spot. When you get into attics, that's often unrealistic, if you condition them with dehumidification such as the SD 12, you can.

You can often get to that level. I'm you may not always be able to, but you still want to keep those dew points as low as you can get them anywhere that you're gon na have cold surfaces like ducts vents. Anything like that to prevent that condensation for some of you who are in arid environments, you know we call these areas, you know that have desert, they have sand outside, rather than green grass. None of this applies to you.

You don't have to worry about. Hardly any of this because you just don't have those sorts of conditions. You have very low dew points year-round, but when you're in other markets even places like Ohio, you have seasons where you get high dew points and that's where you have to think about and control these factors again surface temperature. We can control in some cases, but often the best bet is to control the dew point of the air.

Hopefully that was helpful thanks for watching we'll catch you on the next one.

49 thoughts on “Why air conditioning ducts, units and vents sweat”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lakeland Records says:

    I'm in Central Florida with the air handler in the garage. There is not a chance in hell of getting humidity down to the 40-50% range. It's straight up 80-90% humidity most of the year. My ducts on the air handler are sweating bullets and it's ruining the ducts, there is water all over the floor and the bottom and corners of the ducts. What do I do? I already have some big water damage on them.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Eric Johnson says:

    We have a 2005 Norris single wide. We got a new 3 ton Train inside/outside unit with Train Cleaneffects whole home air purifier. We got it because we love the house very cold and didn't want to wait hours for it to get to set temp. At first we kept it 67° day and 59° night. The temp. difference caused our new LVP flooring to have gaps so we stopped doing that. We set the temp. to 70° all the time and got a really good portable ac unit for our bedroom to keep it ice cold. A few months later we noticed the drywall is a little mushy- the inside of exterior walls in bedroom are condensating. Do you know how I can fix this issue (with out increasing the temperature of ac)?

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Rostkowski says:

    Well done sir, the more you get into hvac you realize know body knows for sure but who is the smartest in the room suggesting goes as fact based on theory 🤔. Temperature pressure relationship is an exact science. Sizing and troubleshooting is hypothesis based on that,no one gets it perfect, too many variables.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Rostkowski says:

    Bust out the sling sychrometer

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Randy Bennett says:

    So the moral of the story is you're rarely going to fix this problem unless you remove the equipment and prep the space, equipment and ductwork like mentioned. Alternatively make sure the contractor specs the space to be conditioned prior to new equipment. Very nicely done video and thank you for all the time you spend preparing these.

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Yak Motley says:

    Thanks for this video! I have this problem. Attic is vented but now sweating for the first time.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joe Rostkowski says:

    Lanten heat is change of state Are you in Nepean ?

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Brantley May says:

    Hey Bryan, I'm a Building Scientist in Florida as well. Great video! I wanna add something for anyone in the comments that has helped me.

    I typically like to grab the dew point outdoors along with the attic dew point for a good comparison. Dew point in a vented attic can only, at best, be the dew point outside. If DP seems really high, but is the same as outside, at least you know the attic itself is performing well. It's a good isolation strategy. I would note that if you just use a hygrometer while on site, it's only a snapshot in time and you won't have the whole picture of what could be happening in other parts of the day. Using data loggers over a period of time are better to catch trends (putting one in the attic, in the conditioned space on each floor, one outside, etc.).

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars PRETTY COOL AC says:

    Yeah great video. I see this often in texas. Mostly vents sweating inside the home. The boots also must be insulated well.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Pamela P says:

    This was awesome n informative. Thank you so much for this!!

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lu Gunn says:

    OR…you can buy one of those NASA astronaut suits and helmets and move to the Moon…or Mars…if Elon Musk actually succeeds… LOL 😂

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars mdlrr78 says:

    My attic has something similar. With sweating on the box no water in the secondary pan. But inside of my home the humidity level shows 70%. My a/c is at 70 degrees. The condensation is on the box that leads to the ducts. How can I get this fixed. I had my home built in 2014. Some bedrooms are not all that cold.

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars mdlrr78 says:

    Omg I’m so lost with all the a/c verbiage!

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Fernando Garnica says:

    Great information thanks Bryan!

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Michael Levy says:

    Good educational video

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Paul Carr says:

    if this was for teaching… he didn't do a good job. again, way too fast!!!!

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Paul Carr says:

    way too fast at explaining

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Paul says:

    I just went through at least a 100 different videos on air conditioning duck work every last one of them every last one Assumes you have a
    have a basement or an attic not a crawl space a home built on a slab
    What a waste of time.
    I live in a mobile home I want to know how my system works

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars jascam1 says:

    How do you seal, insulate and condition a air handler (in garage) that condensate? in S.W Florida

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tony Trabucco says:

    Late to this discussion, but my son’s home has sweating vents — ducts are on the roof, exposed to direct sunlight (Southern CA), but appear to have some insulation inside of the ducts (flat roof – there is no attic). They don’t run the AC a lot as they generally aren’t home during the day. Seems to be the worst when hot outside. Will supplemental dehumidification inside of the house be helpful?

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Johnette Beaver says:

    I plan on building a house when I sell the one I’m in and would desperately love to end up with an AC system that actually works and doesn’t end up with the sweating ducts I have lived with my entire life here on the east coast of FL.

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Johnette Beaver says:

    If you completely seal the attic by spray foaming an attic won’t it make the sheathing of the roof rot?

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Miguel Barrientos says:

    Yea i had sweaty vents, i pull it off and you can easily see a finger nail gap on the boot. This solved my sweaty vent problem. Now i need to figure out why the light switch bracets have a water ring around it and the middle hallway of my house where the wall meets floor is sweating too. I live along the South Texas coast so yea March-Oct are the worst months of the year. Wierd how this problem literally happend after Harvey so i dont know if my house shifted or something with no damage to the outside whatsovever.

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars K BBV Welsh says:

    I can't believe the ridge vent was cut out. I've been in the spray foam business for 15 years and my attics rarely if never go above 83-85 F. You want a totally sealed attic and semi conditioned.

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sunshine says:

    Is that true if you cool down inside the attic by 10 degree, that mean you would get less condensation?

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Lois Fun and Learn Day says:

    very informative and helps me a lot having issue now with duct sweating and vent sweating and my FCU was place on the attic. Service area Orleans??

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sunshine says:

    I believe if your room temperature is set below 75 degree F, you will get "condensation," and the leaking will begin.

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sunshine says:

    There are many people don't care about the electric bills and they keep enjoy cool to cold air inside the house. The air-ducts are sweating and leaking due to condensation. I told my friend "don't set temperature below 75 degree F." Now, I have to fix the leaking. Are you in Barrhaven ?

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars wayne Kea says:

    talking too fast and complicate.

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Norton HVACR says:

    Your videos are awesome. Thanks man. Much appreciated

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dave K says:

    When you conditioning a space.. say you want that space at 72. The air blowing out of the vents has to be at 52. Sweating is a product of ducts not insulated. To attics not being ventilated properly hence a fan. Soffit vents with ridge vent does NOT work unless you sustain 10-15mph winds all the time. Sealing ducts helps too! There are many many factors. Also what is the insulation value for the duct? What is a the insulation value for the run outs? There is more of a science to HVACR than average people think about.

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars wagner55 says:

    I gotta say again jesus! Your videos a fantastically educational. Great job…..again thank you. Are you in Kanata ?

  33. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars EuropaWill says:

    Question: Recently I had a new Furnace with Acoil installed in my basement. It included new flex return and supply boxes and insulated ducts to the new equipment. The return and supply both were fed into custom insulated boxes that fed into/out of the furnace/acoil areas. Right before the installer left upon completion of the install, he took a screw driver or pencil (couldn't tell because he did it so fast) and punctured a single hole in the flex insulated box that is sitting directly before the air filter from the return duct, and punctured another hole through the insulated box wall of the box that outputs from the acoil into the supply ducting. What is the purpose of meticulously sealing the boxes and ducting with tape only to puncture the boxes with holes? I asked him after i saw him do it and he acted very sketchy and said something about using a probe to test but when I asked him if he would test those he said he wouldn't because he believed they were fine!? I like to trust technicians to do things by the book but in this case I felt suspicious he intentionally wanted to degrade the unit in some way out of spite or to ensure a service call down the line. I want to get a better sense from another professional before I call them on it. Could you weigh on on this? Thank you!

  34. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Timothy Petrone says:

    Good video. If i may ask a question,my new replacemnet ac is the same size as the old one. The instalation looks very maticulous,with low fan speed the evaporator coil will freeze . The ac tech, raises the fan speed to increse temp. At evaporator coil and the pressure is now 40psi instead of 30psi. The fan is so loud its unbelievable. It has a 2 speed fan motor, low speed is quiet like the old unit. He resurched the motor and foundered settings inside the motor cover, which was only marginally better. I asked if he could raise the setting on the exspansion valve so the temperate in the evap.coil would be above freezing.he said it is not adjustable and would not work well. He said the unit is too large. the old one which was installed very poorly, ripped ducks, you name it,but did not freeze and had multiple fan speeds.the home is 95 years old and only insulation in the attic foot, 6 inches. Thank you ,tim Service area Kanata??

  35. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ed Lauren says:

    Great educational video! Thank you! I would add one solution of sweaty grills that I had to used a few times this 2020 summer. So, brand new 10 ton Trane package rooftop unit and supplies were sweating like crazy…. Turns out that it had only 3 return ducts 14’ each. Pretty much a half of the return it should have! For supply it had 4 16’ flexes…. So, I just added 2 14’ returns and the problem was solved. Now, after watching this video, I know that I’ve increased the supply air temperature by adding adequate returns 🙂
    Thank you one more time! Are you in Ottawa ?

  36. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Joseph Klimchock says:

    Just hand new heat pump unit installed, Florida, furnace in garage, and does get hot in summer, outside panels sweat, but also the filter is getting wet from so much condensation "inside" the air handler, that the inside insulation is getting saturated and then the water leaks onto the filter below. 15 seer Bryant, single speed unit, all works great except for the extreme condensation inside and outside the unit…….only a month old, my AC guys say this is normal in hot, humid areas. My old unit was 36 years old, and sweated outside panels, but not inside……I dont know if long term, all this moisture trapped and wet insulation will damage inside parts????? Any advise much appreciated.

  37. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Donnie Robertson says:

    Great job and video

  38. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars KDR 1224 says:

    Good stuff. Wet duct calls are the best. Service area Ottawa??

  39. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Abel Urrutia says:

    Question. This might sound stupid but what about raising the temperature in the attic? I remember reading in some book that sometimes raising the temperature of the space a little bit in order to remove the humidity is the best bet. Besides, you’re already burning energy by running a dehumidifier if saving energy is your goal.
    Just like trying to save the planet by using electric cars instead of petro. You destroy the landfill and contaminate the earth by extracting the precious metals or you contaminate the air by burning fossil fuel. There’s no way around the it.

  40. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Abel Urrutia says:

    Great Job on that presentation.

  41. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jorge Iniguez says:

    Please show us how to check all static pressure in a furnace in the closet 😃

  42. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars GABRIEL GONZALEZ says:

    Hi Bryan

     I really appreciate this video, it has been extremely helpful!!!

    My attic is Icynene completely. When the 5 ton Ac was installed, they put 2- 6*8 air vents in the attic and a return ( not sure if this should have been done). The size of the attic is about 2300-2500 sq ft. My ac ducts leading into the house and the plenum boxes sweat like there is no tomorrow and the drips are causing mold growth. SO before I saw your video I just recently encapsulated them by buying over 50 cans of spray foam and spray them to create more insulation with hopefully preventing my sweating (condensation).

    #1 I do not know if this will work. If you can give me some advice, please.

    #2 can you highly recommend someone who knows how to deal with an attic that has been icynene and the condensation problem I am having. Someone from Miami or nearby areas that is.

    I have called mountains of companies from high end to low end and they do not know what the heck I have in my attic. To them, it’s the strangest thing, and unsure if having ac vents in the attic is the ideal thing or not so they can’t give proper recommendations on how to solve my problem.  I even just recently called one company and asked about the Dehumidifiers and they were not sure about adding one.

    Running into your video has been a bit of a blessing because it’s exactly the problem I am having.

    I would appreciate your feedback and recommendations. Thank you and stay safe. —

  43. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Brad Meade says:

    I had an issue with a customer's main plenum at the air handler and the plenum running across the floor joists sweating in the small unfinished area of his basement. There was no water staining or signs of sweating in the HVAC soffits of the finished areas of the basement. The unfinished furnace room doesn't have a supply and didn't have any pass thru grills, the HVAC contractor has installed two pass thru grills to the finished areas to try to eliminate the problem. It did not. The dew point of the room was 59.7, RH was 62.4%, air temp of the room was 73.2F, the air temp inside the supply plenum was 54.6F and the plenum surface temp was 64F. Would you have any ideas on how to correct the sweating plenum and why this is happening? Thanks so much for this video.

  44. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars TechFive says:

    That's extremely helpful thank you! I saw a kalos van I think it was in Clearwater. Maybe st Pete on Monday. Dont remember where but I was running a service call. It was parked at a commercial building. I was star stuck lol. I would love to work for a company like yours that takes pride and the time to be part of growth and development of their employees. Keep up the great work Service area Nepean??

  45. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars WR ZL1 says:

    That was incredibly helpful. I’ve got an evap coil that’s sweat a little bit and I was thinking I needed more air and as you pointed out less air is correct and it’s in a closet that’s semi conditioned but also has some holes where pipes and wires are going through the wall to the laundry room. So I’ll seal up the holes and go back to a little less air to the evap coil. 🙏it works

  46. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Antlerdreamer says:

    Excellent explanations, great video!

  47. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Douglas Kahane says:

    Bryon talks too fast

  48. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Dale Hargreaves says:

    So I got a quote from a (green) company for a quote on a new system. Instead of even going inside the house, let alone looking at the exhisting duct work, just quoted based on "did the last system cool the house?". Pathetic.

    Makes me want to learn the trade just to benefit society. Too bad I'm pushing sixty an have a good gig.

    Not what I would call green.

  49. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars wrlgmail says:

    Awesome tips Bryan and Jesse. This sweating seems to be more of an issue than it used to be with the lower efficiency units. Also, slowing the blower speed seems counter-intuitive but makes perfect sense. Thanks!

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