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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Short #36 - Stack Effect

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Training, Careers, Airconditioning, Self-improvement, Hvac, Business, Education, Refrigeration, Heating, Ac, Apprenticeship

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 8 January 2019

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, we talk through stack effect. We explain what it is and what sorts of comfort issues it can cause in a home.

Most of us understand that hot air rises even though heat itself doesn't rise. The stack effect is precisely a version of that piece of common knowledge; hotter air is less dense than cooler air, so it floats above the cooler air. In hotter air, the molecules move a lot faster than they do in cooler air, so they can start to separate from each other, which reduces the overall air density.

For the most part, we don't work pressurize air in HVAC work (not refrigerant), but we do change the temperature. The temperature changes cause the difference in air densities to emerge.

If we're dealing with a furnace system in a two-story house or a home with high ceilings, we see that stack effect in action. When that hotter air rises and cooler air sinks, the hotter air makes way for a vacuum that draws colder air into the building. While that hot air rises, the colder air comes in under doors and through low cracks. Although the air that's coming out of the appliance is warm, it can't do much to heat the space before rising.

The reverse stack effect can also happen. When you have poorly sealed can lights or cracks in the ceiling, the colder, denser air will sink and create negative pressure near the highest point of the room. When we have that negative pressure, hot air can get pulled in from the attic or other undesirable locations. In Florida, we have to worry quite a bit about the reverse stack effect, whereas the stack effect is more of a concern for colder climates.

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Transcript

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0:00.0

Well, hey there, this is a short episode of the HVAC School podcast, just a small little

0:06.4

nugget, that hopefully will be worth your time, and before we get into that, I want to thank

0:10.7

our sponsors. One of the people I want to thank that isn't technically a sponsor,

0:14.3

but it's a company that we work with, is Sodder Weld.

0:16.8

If you haven't taken a look at solder Weld products,

0:19.6

then I don't know where you've been,

0:20.8

but you can go to Products ByProws.com and you find out more about Sodder Weld and where you can buy it locally.

0:25.8

Or if you find that you can't buy it locally, then you can go to True Tech Tools.

0:30.0

And specifically, I'm going to suggest that you look at the all in one kit by

0:33.1

solder weld. I think you're going to like it. It's a very good value for what you get.

0:36.4

Comes with everything you need to basically do all of the bracing and soldering jobs that

0:40.5

we run into an HVAC in appropriate quantities.

0:44.0

And then I also want to thank fieldpiece,

0:46.2

fieldpiece.com, refrigeration technologies,

0:48.9

makers of all sorts of really good cleaners and products,

0:52.4

chemicals for the HVAC industry that are more natural and less chemical.

0:56.0

Navac, Navag Global.com makes all kinds of great tools for the HVAC industry.

1:01.0

They're innovating a lot of new products into the U.S. market that you may be

1:04.1

interested in and you can find out more about them at TrueTech Tools as well.

1:08.0

If you want to see the price points on some of the products and again that code gets

1:12.1

schooled always works for these products.

1:16.0

Today I want to talk about Stack Effect. Stack Effect. Stack Effect gets a real wrap and I think there's some confusion about Stack effects, so let's address it.

...

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