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Field investigation and repair of residential ducted forced-air heating systems was conducted on more than 20 recent vintage homes. Fan pressurization, tracer gas, and flow hood measurements were made to quantify preand post-repair duct leakage. The homes studied were participants in the Residential Standards Demonstration Program (RSDP). Most of the homes represented the "current practice" control group. Results showed:

  • Variability of duct leakage is high. About 10% of homes showed little leakage; 10% showed severe leakage.
  • Duct leakage added about 10% to house leakiness, measured by fan pressurization (4 Pa ELA and 50 Pa air exchange).
  • Flow hood tests showed return duct leakage about twice that of supply ducts during normal furnace fan operation. This typically results in net pressurization of the house.
  • Tracer gas tests showed that fan-driven losses dominate infiltration while the furnace fan operates, causing an increase of about one-half air exchange per hour.
  • Duct leakage was only moderately repairable on a retrofit basis. Repairs reduced leakage by about one fourth.
  • Engineering estimates indicated an average of 12% loss of heating system efficiency through air loss caused by duct leaks.
  • Estimates of energy savings from duct repairs averaged 375 kWh per year. Such repairs would have a simple payback of about four years.