In this meeting, we discuss the basics of measuring and setting gas pressure. The importance of understanding your manometer and zeroing it correctly as well as some of the other top Gas safety tips and practices.
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All right so this morning i wanted to talk about measuring gas pressure, specifically because it's getting to be that time of year - and i know we do it so rarely so now that you can pull it up and actually have it on your phone. That will also be helpful because when you come to a gas appliance, we do need to be checking gas pressure, especially if we are setting it up initially doing a startup on it doing a commissioning, that's the most important time, but because we have an entire market, Where folks don't set gas pressure when they start them up, we do need to be checking that now i saw jessica pop her head up as soon as i said that so uh we're gon na work into it. The first time you come to one you're. Definitely gon na wan na you know talk through it with somebody if it's the first time, you've ever measured gas pressure, it would be ideal if you did that with somebody, but again once you know how to do it, it really isn't that complicated.

So long as you do it in the proper sequence and to do it safely, it's just a matter of shutting the gas valve off. While you have it open and then making sure you put the plugs back in, but let's just go through it one at a time. So to start with you're going to shut off the gas furnace appliance um you're going to shut out. That's a weird way of saying that, but you're going to shut off the valve going to it you're going to shut off the shut off now the the technical name for this that's used throughout the country is the gas.

I feel uncomfortable saying that so we're just going to call it the gas valve number two, once you shut off the gas valve you're, going to remove the inlet and outlet test ports on the gas valve now this is the most common gas valve type that we See there is another version that you don't actually remove plugs you actually just crack it. If you come up on one of those, they call it the. I don't remember what they call it. This isn't.

No, it's not! It's not called a crack valve. That's not it! Whatever it is, what's that it's inappropriate, it's probably something inappropriate, there's a lot of that in our trade. You know um. I did a video about that, actually about all the inappropriate terms, huh crack valve.

No, that's not what it's called anyway. It's it's! It's basically a valve that you place your hose direct your little uh hose adapter directly on uh, and then you just crack it open in order to measure and we'll do a separate class on those at some point. But this is the standard valve that we see in our market most often um, and i actually already did an article on this. So i'll i'll find it and we can.

We can link it once you put these once you remove both of these ports, then you put these barbed fittings into each one. Now this is pretty important, because a lot of a lot of you are using manometers that don't measure independently they measure only to each other, and that creates a little bit of a problem when you're doing this. Because then, it's only going to show differential between the two ports, so you have to know is your manometer measuring differential in between the two ports or is it measuring independently? In reference to atmospheric pressure, i'm going to say that again real quick, because this is kind of an important distinction to make every time you're measuring something you're measuring it in reference to something else. Just like we talked about in the voltmeter, you can't take a volt meter and take one probe and stick it in an outlet and measure anything.
You have to measure between two points: you're always measuring a differential, and the same thing is true with a manometer. If you have a single port manometer, what you do is, is you zero it to atmospheric pressure? Then you connect it to the valve and you measure that pressure and it could be either negative or positive. In reference to atmospheric pressure, like in the case of measuring static pressure, when we measure it in reference to the room to the return, we're measuring a negative pressure now quick trick question just so, we don't get too backwards on our science here. Is there such thing as negative pressure? No, why is there no such thing as negative pressure burn because low pressure is just less matter in an area right correct.

So when you get down to zero, there's just no more matter correct and you can't get less than no matter. You can't get less than no molecules, no matter what you do, no matter what you do, you can't get less than no matter which, coincidentally, is why you can always produce more force through pressurizing than through suction right, like when you pull a vat when you, when You take a shot back. This is i've just been thinking about this, because we just did a podcast about cleaning drains when you take a shot back and you hook it up to a drain line outside what is the most pressure that shopvac can produce in order to suck water out? The very most theoretical limit that that shopback can produce. You know the kit doesn't produce anything.

All it does is all it's doing is moving stuff right, but from a theoretical standpoint, the lowest vacuum that it could produce is negative. 14.7, because atmospheric pressure is 14.7 psia right. So whenever we're saying vacuum, we're not really. There really is no such thing as vacuum.

Really, there's just pressure, that's lower than atmospheric pressure, so the theoretical maximum that a shop vac could produce is negative. 14.7. That sucks, not out of a drain line, makes sense, so you have a you have and of course that's not going to happen. It's not even close to that.

But you get the point. That's the theoretical maximum, whereas if you're using nitrogen or air pressure, what's the maximum of positive pressure, you could produce infinity right below the drain to kingdom. Come style pressure right. So that's the problem, but that's also the reason why you can do more with pressure than you can do with vacuum.
Just a just a quick aside. That has nothing to do with what we're talking about other than that when we're referencing a manometer, we're always referencing to something else, and you need to know, is your manometer, designed to reference a to b from point one to point two on the two port manometer Or does it reference both of those and to the center and that's what this field piece manometer? Does it gives you the ability to reference the two to each other? So you can see the differential for something like total external static pressure, but then you can also reference to the center so that you get each one of those independently. My favorite current manometer is the new field piece job link manometer, just because it works with the suite that we're already using the job link probes, and it is a single port manometer, which means you, zero it to atmospheric pressure or whatever pressure you want to reference To and then you take the measurement, but in terms of measuring gas pressure measure measuring the inlet and outlet simultaneously just makes sense first off because it's much easier to shut the gas valve off once the inlet gas shut off all right anyway. To do that once and then pull both the ports and then put both of your probes in zero out your your manometers and then go ahead and start measuring inlet and outlet pressure simultaneously, because what you don't want to do is, let's say you start doing it And then you measure that your outlet pressure your manifold pressure, the pressure actually going into the gas furnace or gas appliance is too low.

I don't want you to start adjusting the valve right away because there's two reasons why it could be too low. What would be one reason it could be that it doesn't have the right gas pressure coming in so matthew, said, restriction sure could be could be that the gas line is too small, but it could be that there's that the gas valve is set inappropriately, and we Don't know which, unless we're measuring the inlet pressure coming into the valve as well, so we remove these ports these ports, you can use a allen key or you can use the 3 16 allen key that comes on your refrigeration service wrench, so the one that we Use to open the service valves that works on the this type of port design and again we're in florida, mostly 80 gas furnaces. This is by far the most common valve type. You will see now they're, not all going to be sitting right up here.

On top, like that sometimes they'll be you know they can be in different locations, but you're going to have one little port on the on the inlet side, you're going to have one little port on the outlet side, everybody following me so far anything super complicated here Or scary, no, it's not it's very straightforward. We put our little barbed fittings in now. You got to have the barbed fittings. That's another thing i like about the field piece kits.
Is they come with them? They come with the barb fittings. They come with the hoses. They come with all the stuff you need in order to measure gas pressure and static pressure, which is the two things you're going to do with a manometer, quick show of hands who doesn't have a manometer here, okay, the video guy doesn't have a manometer. We need to get you one of those nate.

I mean what are you doing um, so some of you who are newer, some of you who are still apprentices, don't have them, but you do need to have a manometer because you can't check either of those things unless you have one and in terms of gas Pressure, if you don't have a monomer, you really are guessing and if you get to a place where the flame is not looking quite right or you're, not getting the performance that you expect. The next thing you need to do is adjust gas pressure, and you absolutely cannot do that if you don't have a manometer all right. So once you insert the fittings you put the hoses in you see you just thread them in a lot of people. Get real worked up about taking these things and really tighten them down.

You don't need to do that. You just finger, tighten them in because again, a tiny bit of gas leakage around that valve and again you wouldn't want any significance, but yeah. It's a little go ahead and say you just put a little pressure on them. Okay, just make sure they're in all the way, but just just make sure they're in all the way.

What i don't what i see a lot of people do, the first time they do this. Is they take these and they put a wrench on them? That's not necessary. I mean you can if you want, but i don't want you tightening them down. I don't want you messing up the threads on this thing or messing up your barb fittings, because you're trying to get these things super super tight.

So anyway, once you get those in zero out, your manometer make sure that it is zeroed to atmospheric pressure. That is critical. A lot of mistakes are made both with static pressure and with gas pressure by not zeroing the manometer. Now there are cases and i'm just paying homage to people who work with 90, sealed combustion furnaces when you're working with a sealed combustion furnace.

There is no reference to the pressure in the room. The reference is the pressure inside the furnace, because it's all sealed combustion and that's where you need to make sure that you're not zeroing out to room pressure. You're zeroing out to the pressure that's inside the furnace cabinet. Most of what we work on is what we call open combustion where you've got the louvers on the front of the gas furnace and that's where the combustion air and oxygen draws in for the furnace to work safely and properly, which is another quick aside.

One of the most important safety things you can do is make sure on our market, that you don't have furnaces in sealed areas that don't have access to free and open air. So this is why, when you have a gas furnace in a closet, it's got to have some nice vent space up into the attic or some other area that it can easily get enough oxygen consistently and again. This is another consideration. You go into a house that had access into the attic, but then you icing the attic seal it up really tight.
Now sometimes that could be okay, and this comes down there's a lot of calculations that have to be done, but, generally speaking, you don't want to have a gas appliance in any sort of sealed area that it cannot get free oxygen from outside. That's just a good general rule. You get into contained versus uncontained spaces and all that, but for our market just make sure it's got enough oxygen all right, so you zero out. Now you open the gas shut off as soon as you open the gas shut off.

You should see pressure on which one of the ports, the inlet right, so this guy right here this is our inlight coming in i'm going to start seeing pressure there. Now i'm going to check it right then and there, but the reality is, is that it's probably going to be fine to begin with, because it's just like measuring water pressure on your house when no faucets are running your water pressure on your house or no faucets Are running are probably going to be fine now again, i'm on a well system. So i face this problem all the time most of you are in city, water. I've never had this issue, but when you have a system that can't produce enough water flow, your pressure will be fine, so long as nothing's running that's what we call static pressure, but as soon as you start running faucets now the water pressure drops down.

That's what we call dynamic pressure so, if nothing's running, if the gas furnace isn't running, i'm only measuring static pressure on the inlet. As soon as i run the gas furnace now, that's when my inlet pressure is going to tend to drop. So i open up the gas shut off now i run the appliance in heat mode. Once i start running the appliance, i need to make sure that the inlet pressure maintains above the minimum inlet pressure, and where do i find that data about what the inlet pressure should be in all that data tag? It is right there i mean they put it right there on the data tag, nice and easy nice, and pretty it tells you what your inlet should be.

It tells you what your manifold pressure should be and manifold pressure is another term for the outlet pressure of the valve the pressure going into that manifold. That then feeds the spuds on the gas furnace, the actual orifices all right, so we run it now. We check our outlet pressure as well as our inlet pressure simultaneously make sure our inlet pressure is still what it needs to be with the furnace running and then check our outlet pressure outlet. Pressure should be between 3.2 and 3.8 for natural gas and 10.5 to 11.5.
For propane, but follow manufacturer specified pressure ranges because when i say this, that is a general rule. That is not an absolute rule, but it is pretty solid. It's going to be typically what you see with natural gas and propane appliances, lp appliances, all right turn: adjustment screw clockwise to increase outlet, pressure and counterclockwise to decrease outlet pressure. Now your adjustment screws can be in different locations, the most common look! If you see this brass cap right here, see this brass cap back behind the the inlet you take, that brass cap off and then underneath that brass cap is an adjustment screw, it's usually a plastic type of material adjustment screw, and you want to turn it counter To clockwise to increase gas pressure and counterclockwise to decrease gas pressure, so it functions more like a acetylene regulator or an oxygen regulator where it's not it's not how you think.

It's not like you open it up like a valve in order to get more pressure. You actually turn it down in order to increase the pressure so you're turning it clockwise to increase now you're going to see that. So it's not like. I get a lot of people.

I can't remember which it is well, obviously, as soon as you start adjusting it. You're going to see your manifold pressure change and if you're going the wrong direction, start turning it the other way. I mean i don't know about you, but i still struggle with righty tighty lefty loosey. Sometimes when it's in a weird configuration it's like.

Oh that's, not! That's the wrong way, the other direction. Oh, i just just snapped the head off, that's a bummer! Maybe i should memorize that at some point so anyway, um make sure that you're measuring inlet and outlet pressure not differential pressure. This is key. This is kind of what we just talked about.

You got to make sure that you're measuring those separately and not the differential between the two makes sense and that's knowing your manometer if you use the ones. I suggest then you're not going to have this problem because it they make it really easy once you're all done. Arguably the most important part of this process is you shut the gas valve back off again, you replace those original ports. Now those ports you want to make sure are in nice and snug and i would suggest using a little bit of our new nylon white, which is going to be our uh.

I don't know if you've seen it yet have you seen it no long white. So it's great because it works on water and gas and it's very smooth. It's almost like a silicone. It doesn't dry, i'm actually really excited about it.

I think it will make some things a lot easier. What do you think about it? Bert, that's great! It's great! Isn't it yeah, but it's nice, because you don't have to keep various types of pipe dope on your truck. You've got the same pipe dope that we can use for water and gas so drain lines whatever plumbing in your house, whatever you want to use it for um, not refrigerant, on refrigerant lines. What do we use? Nylon? Blue! That's right! It's always a bad time when somebody says whoops, i'm i've been using pipe dope on it.
The whole time right on my flares, a little massive yeah. Now i want a quick caveat here, which is that when we do commissioning of gas appliances, we also do combustion analysis, because that is a really good part of the process. To make sure that we're not going to start up a new system and have a dangerous condition but max and as many combustion analysis as analyses as you've done. How many have you actually found a problem with uh excess, uh carbon monoxide right off the bat yeah? It's it it's it's not yeah, it's just.

It doesn't happen um. Now, when i say it doesn't happen, of course it could can happen and it is generally related to significant venting issues or combustion air, but most of the real problems you're going to catch with the gas furnace you're going to catch by being visually aware, venting not Done properly now, 80 is pretty easy, but if you had a event that was completely disconnected, that would obviously be your problem right. So that's that's one thing to look for looking for combustion. Air in our market is probably the biggest and then also just making sure that nothing's leaking gas.

You know everything's assembled properly. Those of you who don't have a combustible leak detector need to get one. That's a really good safety step and again you're not going to find it all the time, but if you're doing maintenances on gas appliances just grab that combustible leak, detector just run it around all of your connections and make sure that nothing is leaking. It's a good safety step.

Another thing is when the uh, when the gas valve is off - and you have gas pressure, the gas valve shouldn't be leaking through any significant amount. So you shouldn't measure, you know it shouldn't be leaking through enough. That you're going to be measuring gas video on fighting, so we can share bert's video on sniffing them out with your sniffer, and that is actually another really good point. Uh, take complaints about smelling gas really seriously.

Um, don't be dismissive, dismissive of those uh complaints and it can be any gas appliance, so it could be the water heater, yeah, yeah dryer, it could be. The range yep could be the range yeah and, and that's another really good point - is that sometimes you'll have intermittent problems with gas appliances that occur because um when the entire house is under maximum load. That's when the gas pressure is dropping. So when you have kind of weird intermittent problems with gas furnaces, you want to run all of the gas appliances and then check your gas pressure, because you can have issues where you can get roll out.
You can get all kinds of issues where, if the, if the actual inlet gas pressure is dropping, when you have multiple appliances or gas appliances running at once, now again, it's not like we're going to go on every maintenance and run every gas appliance in the entire House, but in terms of kind of the kind of the sequence here of getting better and better at gas start with being really good as your visual inspections, that's the first and most important thing. Second check your gas pressures. Third check for carbon monoxide in the space use your just personal carbon monoxide detector and just make sure that you're not getting carbon monoxide around the furnace or inside the house anywhere. That's big and then kind of the the granddaddy is to start doing combustion analysis and we've been walking this path over the last several years, where we're first getting really good at making sure the furnaces we install we're doing all of this uh and now getting to The place where we're starting to get better at doing it when we maintain them again, we don't do a lot of them, but we do enough of them that it's it's an area that we can definitely improve but start by measuring gas pressure.

It's always a challenge, because it's one of those tools that kind of sits in the on the shelf and doesn't get used a lot and then, when it's time to use it it's like well, does it have batteries, does it whatever? I mean a big thing with any of these sorts of instruments is keeping extra batteries on your truck double a triple a's nine volts right. You need to keep those on your truck plenty of extras happy for you to get extras if they, if you see that we run out, tell nathan bishop hey buy a ton more of these, i don't care. I want you to keep batteries on your truck um. So those three need to be truck stock.

You need to have plenty of them, and so that way you don't show up. Well, i can't test it because my manometer doesn't have batteries for your batteries because any moisture, even when they're in the plastic any moisture or anything like that oil, it just destroys them so having a nice clean bin that doesn't have any moisture. Buildup is yeah beneficial. A good place for your batteries is big.

A good organization in general is important and that's what a lot of times gets in the way of doing more advanced procedures. That's right now, having seen this now, having seen this, does anybody feel uncomfortable checking gas pressure? Where is the biggest go ahead? Burt, i feel uncomfortable with people checking gas pressure unless you're, because you went on a long time about zeroing out to atmospheric pressure. But you need to point out that, unless your manometer has a atmosphere, pressure port, like shown in that picture, right, which is pretty rare, you're still going to have to hook up on each side of the manifold. While you have two manometers going at once, i felt like i covered this.
Pretty well, didn't didn't happen. Didn't i didn't sleep, but no, it's fine. A majority of your manometers you're gon na have to have two hooked up. At the same time, in order to check, i wouldn't say the majority, i would say the majority of the really cheap ones, yeah i.e the one you probably have.

Oh, no, that was mean um, yes, step. One know your manometer go ahead and say you have a cheap one. How do you do it? Okay, that's always gon na ask throw it in the trash. If you have a cheap one, the cheap one references between the two ports, so meaning it's just measuring the differential between the two ports and if that's, what you've got you're going to have to do them.

One at a time correct, you're going to have to measure you're going to have to and again i would. I would just do the manifold pressure to start with. So if i have one of those i'm not going to do the inlet pressure to start with, i'm just going to do the manifold pressure, so i'm just going to do this side first, going out into the gas furnace. If that's, if this one, if this one's pressure is fine, when it's running, then i'm not going to worry about it right, that's because likely it's going to be fine.

We don't want to go around adjusting gas valves for no reason we adjust them when they're outside of the manufacture, specified range, which is generally going to be 3.2 to 3.8 inches of water column boom, yeah uh. In terms of visual inspection. I just quickly. What are you looking for when you look at a gas furnace? We are really lucky in florida because we have these 80 that are actually very easy to look at the flame.

You know everything is very easy to see in an eighty percent step. One do not run a furnace with the lower panel off okay, so like it's, it has the door switch, but a lot of people you put something on the door switch to make it stay on, don't run a furnace with the furnace with the blower panel off. Do you understand what i'm saying, because what happens is is that now it's sucking air through right around the furnace and those two things aren't supposed to mix right, the gassy part and the airy part aren't supposed to mix. So you want combustion air to pull in through, because you have that inducer as well as the natural convection of the flame to draw that air into the face of that 80 percent.

But you don't want to have roll out or to have carbon monoxide or any of that stuff, and obviously it's going to act weird if you have the panel off so have the panel on start the furnace and what you want to see is because initially that Flame is going to fire. You know you're, going to you're going to either see your hot surface, igniter you're, going to hear the tick, tick, tick, tick, tick and then whoosh right now you got your flame you're. Looking at your flame, what you're looking for is that flame to be a nice clean? Looking, you know generally pretty much blue flame. It's going to be typical again if you're working with, like you know, super old furnace, maybe not, but your modern furnaces you're going to see that nice blue flame, it shouldn't be like where one of them is like cockeyed and like hitting the side it shouldn't be.
Where anything is loose or like pointing different directions, and then, when that blower starts because on a furnace first it lights and then it runs for a little bit and then the blower starts right. When that blower starts, you shouldn't see the flames start going. Whoa onions just like that. Just like that, you don't want to see that what it's consistent, i will say every time you say that, because you've said that exact thing you did the exact same thing right, yeah, that's that's what it does.

You can count on it right of a wiggly flame, a wiggly flame right, and so, if you get a wiggly flame, it doesn't matter it does matter why you have to figure out why you're getting a wiggly flame and most commonly you're, getting a wiggly flame, because You've got some air leakage into the combustion chamber from the air side, and usually it's something you can fix pretty easily right. So just see like where, where is air communicating in between these two, but the worst case scenario could be a heat exchanger crack um in our market. We see very, very few heat exchanger cracks. We have such a small heating season and heat exchanger cracks occur because of a lot of heat cycling over time.

You know on off on off on off. That's what causes them generally speaking, so we get precious few of those, but it is something that is real. If a heat exchanger is known to be cracked, then we need to replace it or replace the furnace, but in the grand scheme of things it's actually not the most likely cause. It's actually one of the lower likelihood causes of a really dangerous furnace.

The most likely causes are improper venting where it's recycling flu gases back into the home. Somehow it could be because you know it could be something as simple as an intake on a fresh air. That's sitting right next to a uh, the gas furnace uh flu pipe outlet. You know so just dumb stuff like that.

Those are the sorts of things that you're gon na wan na look for and then finally, in terms of inspection on a furnace. Just look for stuff that looks like it's been getting hot wires anywhere around the heat exchanger box. You know anything that looks like it's been getting hot or screws that look abnormally rusted for some reason. You know that can be condensation issues.

There's things like that. That can happen, but mostly you're, going to catch this stuff, if you're, really just paying attention you're doing a good physical inspection on pool heaters like we've talked about it's mostly corrosion related and if you've got a pool, heater, that's falling apart on you shut it off And write it up, they're, not safe when the burner's falling down and there's no way to fix that do not write up for quote the customer a new burner. It's not it's not going to go back in i mean how many times has that happened. We're just like quote the customer uh, it's like! No, you can't and now once you've opened that pandora's box.
Now the customer just thinks you're trying to rip them off, but once the frame is rusting out on a gas pool heater, you need to just replace it. I will say on gas pool heaters for some reason: a lot of these builders put in 400 000 btu meters right and if you look at the pipe size right required for four hundred thousand views it usually it's insufficient um. I like dropping that down to 250. On small residential pools, it makes life a lot easier in terms of piping size, yeah, it's so much better and i've seen consistently that the gas pressure issue that sometimes we have on these 400s kind of disappears.

Once you drop down too quickly right right again like what's what's going to happen, it's not like they're, just not going to get their pool as hot as fast is all that it's going to come down to. But who cares you think about it? I mean most of these pools have heat pumps that are 140 000 btus on the top end right at 65 degrees, and now you have a gas here that produces yeah. You know 80 of 250 yeah and we can tell the customer that just solves a lot of problems by going down to a 250 and it's less expensive like like we're, obviously not trying to scam them because we're charging them less for the pool heaters so um. It's just in everyone's best interest at that point, so that's always something to look for on those appliances.

We don't generally see gas furnaces that are installed with undersized um gas lines. Yeah, that's what furnaces are still oversized significantly because most of the match-ups, oh match-up problems, yeah problems. So it's it's always a little bit tricky. So we've got a lot better at actually reducing furnace size but yeah yeah.

It's a challenge in our market, so cool any questions about any of this. No all right, thank you. Have a great week happy thanksgiving thanks for watching our video. If you enjoyed it and got something out of it, if you wouldn't mind hitting the thumbs up button to like the video subscribe to the channel and click, the notifications bell to be notified when new videos come out, hvac school is far more than a youtube channel.

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37 thoughts on “How to measure gas pressure – kalos meeting”
  1. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Sebastian Kaluzynski says:

    Many of the high efficiency boilers won't even have a manifold pressure listed or even a manifold pressure test port on their gas valves. Only measure is inlet and the rest is adjusting based on combustion analysis on lowest/highest modulations. Another good tip to look for by techs new to gas is checking if the unit wasn't incorrectly converted from Nat to LP or vice versa.

  2. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Straightoutofchiraq says:

    They bleeped gas cock! Lol Service area Nepean??

  3. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars michael grimshaw says:

    Hi. Do you know a standalone instrument that can measure the pressure inside a hyperbaric chamber in ATA or psi. Is there a wrist worn unit that can do this. Thanks for your help.

  4. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chad says:

    Love your videos, keep up the good work

  5. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars dave johnsonnola says:

    Somewhere near the end of this started thinking about looking for a pool heater and running a few loops of hydronic heat under my 80 yr old gulf coast raised cottage! Are you in Orleans ?

  6. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Rod Graff says:

    Any gas pressure adjustment made, should be verified by clocking the gas meter, to confirm that the BTU input listed on the equipment nameplate is not being exceeded. To do this, you need to determine the gases heat value per cubic foot from the gas company. If you don’t know, you can use 1050 BTU per cubic foot. Then determine how many cubic feet you are burning per hour, by clocking the meter and multiplying by the heat value of the gas. This will verify that the proper offices are installed in the furnace also.

  7. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chad says:

    I like this class,very simple and straightforward.

  8. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars jonathan Raul says:

    Thank you very much well-explained great job once again

  9. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars John D says:

    30 years in the hvac trade. Have never set gas pressure. but then I don't do start ups. Maybe checked gas pressure a dozen times in 30 years. I am still learning.

  10. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Linus says:

    Great!!

  11. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jason Johnson says:

    Combustion air screens 12" from the top of the wall and 12" from the bottom of the wall. Especially in a closet. After making any gas pressure adjustments let the system stabilize for a few minutes before adjusting any further. Up here in the NE we have almost all gas and a little oil still around. I come from cali, so i am used to heat pumps and gas. Its fairly easy to adjust and understand.
    Use B-vent instead of single wall pipe. B-vent will help with less condensation in the flue vs single wall, which gives up its thermal energy to the surrounding environment. Here in the NE you see mostly single wall flue going into a chimney and it creates condensation, also the chimney is usually oversized for the furnace and definitely helps promote condensation and draft issues

  12. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars CHOMAHOMA says:

    Thank you for all your videos man

  13. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Brian Graham says:

    Great class

  14. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars texture6 says:

    👍🏻 Are you in Barrhaven ?

  15. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Tim B says:

    To properly set gas pressure every gas appliance have to be running at the same time. It does no good to to set with only the furnace running. And never put any pipe dope on the test port plugs. That can stop up the valve.

  16. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Bob Y says:

    Very good video and this is coming from someone who's been in the gas utility industry for over 35 years & over 10,000 emergency calls ran. I was also impressed that this is coming out of a technical school in Florida, a State not really dominant in the Natural Gas utility industry like we are in the midwest and northern states. I would like to add some terms we use in the industry that may help in your teaching.# 1 when dealing with regulators from the transmission line to the built-in gas valve regulators at the appliances , gas pressures are considered working and lock up pressures.#2 when explaining the manometer you may want to use an actual U tube manometer in your demonstration, so the students may get a better understanding of what the electronic manometer is doing and based on. The actual U tube manometer is what we still use in the utility industry today, due to documenting gas pressures in case of an incident ( U tube manometer are absolute , with no need for calibrations. Due to liability concerns in our industry all electronic instruments used must be calibrated once a month & there are utilities that use the electronic manometer but it does add to their documentation process for instrument accuracy).#3 things you may want to add to your presentation , fuel run sizing, working pressure drop across the fuel runs & clocking the gas meter to determine BTU output of an appliance.
    Hopefully some of these things help , at least fuel for thought. Keep up the great work, the world could use more instructors like you. Are you in Nepean ?

  17. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Engineer Sead says:

    Great Bryn once again

  18. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Phillip Joy says:

    Enjoy your videos.Great teacher 👨‍🏫

  19. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ed Janowiak says:

    It is another inappropriate term, that plug that actually doesn’t come out is called a boss.

  20. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Brian Mcdermott says:

    Great beginners info.

  21. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars knockitofff says:

    Came across 2 Lochinavr boilers last week that heat an outdoor pool on the roof of a high rise, they've been "running" for 4 years now, both were out on flame failure, the inlet gas pressure was at least 32" w.c. (my gauge pegs at that point) not sure how they ever ran. Traced out the piping and found no regulator was ever installed, oops LOL

  22. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Ted E. Bear says:

    Thanks for the information !!

  23. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Phollip says:

    Dope on those pressure ports? Yikes

  24. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Everything HVACR says:

    Trane commercial units, the older 25 tons do have negative pressure gas valves, I know that's not what you were getting at… good video!

  25. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jim Gill says:

    I started up an OXBOX gas pack a few weeks ago and converted it to propane. The ports on the valve were much smaller than anything that I have seen before. I had a cone adapter that worked but I had to hold it in. The barbed adapters that you are showing are way to big to fit the OXBOX valve ports. I assume this tiny port size is normal in China. Service area Barrhaven??

  26. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chris Parker says:

    My gas pressure reads way too high after I have eat my wife’s pot of beans Service area Kanata??

  27. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Winters says:

    Whole house exhaust fans create negative atmos in homes..

  28. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Winters says:

    flame parts outer light blue, and inner core should be darker blue..

  29. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Winters says:

    Northern states..many failed secondary htx. obvious signs..sweat socks odor indoors, outdoors, hot upper bulkhead panel, nuisance roll out trips, lack of heat output, brown liquid leaks near inducer fan or in the blower compartment, differential pressure switch trips (lack of htx free flow)..obvious flames do not jet into primary ports..

  30. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Winters says:

    what conditions would result if those 'spuds' were the wrong size? ie, a propane furnace was connected to a natural gas supply?

  31. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Winters says:

    sq inches/ 1000 btuhr input

  32. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Gary Winters says:

    Cough, cough. oops, sorry. Im off for isolation..yep..the one who takes no chances..

  33. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Danny Smith says:

    Trane uses gas valves that require you to use a small Allen wrench to crack open a screw and place a hose over the nipple

  34. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars HVAC RESIDENTIAL BASICS says:

    Great HVAC Residential Basics knowledge! Great job Bryan👍

  35. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Chris Durham says:

    You put your “hose directly on the nipple”.😳 Are you in Ottawa ?

  36. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jarreds Dad says:

    In our industry an analog clock is an important teaching tool. When you watch the cocks second hand it points to numbers in an increasing pattern. 1, 2, 3, 4, etc,.

    In adjusting gas valves or txv’s it works like the clock. Clockwise gas pressure or super heat increase. Counter clockwise gas pressure or super heat decrease.

  37. Avataaar/Circle Created with python_avatars Jam min says:

    Bryan, I had to adjust gas valve pressure down to 2” wc on a single stage 80k BTu furnace to get below manufacturers range of 50 temp rise. This was after adjusting airflow with a fieldpiece hot wire anemometer to 1200 cfm with .7 esp. Is this ok to lower the gas pressure that low in order to get within manufacturers temp rise? The system is 2 years old, with a 3 ton heat pump.

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