Share
Related Topics
Tagged As
Duct leaks are a fairly common way to lose conditioned air and suck outdoor air into your home. I once worked on a new 4,000-square-foot, upscale suburban home that smelled like a sewer. The owners had been living in a downtown hotel for three months to avoid the smell.
We do not strictly control Google ad content. If you believe any Google ad is inappropriate, please email us directly here.
Leaks cause makeup air to flow into your home and can bring in gases like radon and even pesticides from below the soil.We sealed the duct leaks and the smell went away. (And we didn’t use duct tape, which does not effectively seal ducts. The product to use for sealing ducts is latex, water-based mastic that meets UL 181 specifications.) No leaks, no suction, no smell.
In the past the solution to duct leakage was to compensate by oversizing the system. The contractors didn’t realize that they were compensating for duct leakage. They just knew that if they didn’t put in a system larger than the sizing calculations recommended, they would get callbacks from homeowners complaining that the system wasn’t cooling the house sufficiently. This is like buying a bigger gas tank to compensate for the fact that it leaks a fourth of the gas you put in it. It might work, but it makes no sense, and it is an expensive solution. These leaks can jack up cooling energy bills by 20 to 40 percent.
As the suburban homeowner I was working with found out, these leaks also cause makeup air to flow into your home and can bring in gases like radon and even pesticides from below the soil. One interesting experiment showed that depressurized homes can draw in soil gases from quite a distance. As an agronomist told me after attending one of my trainings, “People don’t realize that the air moves through the soil like wind blows through the trees. If it didn’t, all plant roots would rot and the plants die.”
The house is a system, and that system extends out into your yard. Outdoors, what you put on your lawn and under the house for pests and termites can affect the quality of the air you breathe inside the house. Indoors, how well your air conditioning and heating system works can affect much more than your energy bill. Ignoring or not understanding the interactions among a home’s components can lead to some surprising, and often nasty, home performance problems.
Used by permission of www.HomeEnergy.org. Home Energy magazine’s mission is to disseminate objective and practical information on residential energy efficiency, performance, comfort and affordability. It is the only magazine that thoroughly covers residential comfort issues from the only approach that really works, systems engineering.
HHI Error Correction Policy
HHI is committed to accuracy of content and correcting information that is incomplete or inaccurate. With our broad scope of coverage of healthful indoor environments, and desire to rapidly publish info to benefit the community, mistakes are inevitable. HHI has established an error correction policy to welcome corrections or enhancements to our information. Please help us improve the quality of our content by contacting allen@healthyhouseinstitute.com with corrections or suggestions for improvement. Each contact will receive a respectful reply.
The Healthy House Institute (HHI), a for-profit educational LLC, provides the information on HealthyHouseInstitute.com as a free service to the public. The intent is to disseminate accurate, verified and science-based information on creating healthy home environments.
While an effort is made to ensure the quality of the content and credibility of sources listed on this site, HHI provides no warranty - expressed or implied - and assumes no legal liability for the accuracy, completeness, or usefulness of any information, product or process disclosed on or in conjunction with the site. The views and opinions of the authors or originators expressed herein do not necessarily state or reflect those of HHI: its principals, executives, Board members, advisors or affiliates.