@@MindzEnt of course, the ductwork is inside the insulation of the house. It’s not like and attic or crawl space where it is outside the house insulation
I’m so confused by what you’ve done on that elbow on the supply. Am I tripping or did you hammerlock in a piece of duct to reduce the duct size? Could you not just use a transition there? Or even a change elbow? Also does that not remove one of the slips on that duct piece? Maybe I am tripping but that looks weird lol
Are you talking about the trunk line? I had to 90 over and then 90 back. They didn’t want to drop the entire ceiling so I had to take up as little room as possible. The left is the supply the right is the return
@@BradeyMoore I wish I had such a good ductwork installation in my house but whoever put my ductwork in just slapped it in never sealed it and it's not even on enough brackets I guarantee the ductwork in my basement is going to fall down sometime
@@jaedenspider877 well if you know so much fix it! Like stop talking shit about it and do it the way you think is best because its really fucking stupid being in the hvac trade and not having your own home done right.
Is it insulated on the inside (the main trunk line ) , and how do you seal everything..just asking Cost wise I use mixing boxes and flex, what’s the cost difference In that and a all hard duct system? Like an average 2.5 ton system
No only the runs in an unconditioned space are insulated. The Hvac’s system and the uninsulated ductwork in fully inside the conditioned space so it is not required
@@BradeyMoore just asking cause I’ve never priced one out People never ask about it and these days just want to do the cheaper route But personally I believe it’s the best way to run a duct system, a d insulate the outside, if in a unconditioned space
@@BradeyMoore As per standards there has to be atleast 2 feet distance between the elbow and the duct!!! Plus the fittings in this design are not aerodynamic that would result in more pressure drop hence increasing the load on the fan!!!
@@Her-Bone incorrect, and there are no elbows shown on supply runs in the short. I like how your saying hard pipe is not aerodynamic hahaha. The runs coming off the end of the right truck are returns. Also elbows are ducts.
@@BradeyMoore dear Bradley i could see one take off .. an elbow... Comming directly out of the duct with no aerodynamic design... The flow of air through it would cause lot of noise and pressure drop!!! Because of turbulence and swirl!!! Knowledge is a give nd take process!! My intention was not to insult u!
@@BradeyMoore Takeoff must be a minimum of 12” from the end of the duct. That’s national code and you are required to by whichever code is more stringent, whether it be local or national code. It is actually one of the questions on the test to get your HVAC license. The reason is so that the system can build up pressure and more evenly distribute to all of the takeoffs through the whole system. Think of it this way. Poke a bunch of holes in the sides of a straw and blow though it, the majority of the air comes out the end of the straw and minimal out the holes in the sides. Now block the end of the straw and blow though it again, now you get pressurized air being more evenly distributed out of all the holes in the sides of the straw and distributing to all areas not just the majority out the end.
@vardemanb correct, but they run you see on the end cap is return air not supply. Returns are fine to come off the end cap. Appreciate the time you took for the reply!
Adding a run to an end cap is a no no. Not to mention the crappie knock in into the plenum
It is a return, not a supply run.
@@BradeyMoore honestly I like it aside from the reducer being used as a tap
Its a return smart ass. Newbies be spewing off shit boss told them yesterday.
Actually looks pretty clean. Runs cut into the end cap are fine. Return air doesn't care!
@@BradeyMooreahah
Lmao evreyone knockin ur work must be 80 years in the trade and know evreything good work brother👍
Haha thank you!
Looks fun to wrap unless its insulated on the inside if it is, thats clean as fuck.🎉
Same shit I was thinking thinking static pressure better be right can’t fix anything after
Looks beautiful, nicely done but... no wrap?
Nice job
Thank you 🤙🏻
Predrill flanges to plenum.youll avoid the crease. Nice work
Remembered them good old days
It’s a grind!
This, where a lot of nice ducting work has been done
*** looks around Comment Section ***
*HVAC Pros...... EVERYWHERE!!!*
😂😂😂 ain’t that the truth!
Sir any vacancy
These comments man, everyone is a pro! 🙄 Nice clean work, bro! 💪🏼
Lmao thank you!
Damn ain’t nothing even got duct deal yet!!!
Is there any vacancy for experience certificate
Good Work brother
Thank you sir!
Is any of it gonna get insulated? Also that end duct is gonna throw off all ypur airflow.
House is insulated, runs above the garage are insulated. The run at the end is for a return 🤙🏻
@@BradeyMoore Every house is insulated lol, I don't know a single place that would even allow that during inspection.
@@MindzEnt of course, the ductwork is inside the insulation of the house. It’s not like and attic or crawl space where it is outside the house insulation
@@BradeyMooreinside the ducts??
@@angelzamudio9400 no I don’t like to put fiberglass into the air, insulate outside
could’ve ran it in the joists, is that a return pulling from supply trunk? i hope not lmao
That needs to get insulated too right?
Wow, someone who knows how to design a duct system without using miles of flex duct. If your house is all ducted in flex, that contractor was a hack.
No butter? Or insulation?? Must be from years ago, that shit would fail inspection nowadays, at least in my state
This we in the middle of the install, everything was buttoned up by the end 🤙🏻
Beautiful work but why not just go through the joists?
I did on some, the utility room was packed with plumbing and electric. Do you mean do that instead of truck line?
Some owners prefer to drop their ceiling the round pipe is likely to be in the joist while the duct work is below you can’t but the duct in the joist
2023 and folks still coming off the end .... "Come On Man "
That’s the return side, never the supply side
Damn another one
Fuck all that. We run flex and hide all of our ducts so there can be a regular ceiling using side mounted boxes of cource
Easy with no plumbing in the way or light cans
There was plumbing to go around, but no hvac should go in before the electrician
@Bradey Moore my jobs always have the light cans up 1st so we dont route in the way.
Bhai Mujhe HVAC ka kam sikhana hai Mumbai mein
Koi shop ya address bata sakte ho
I’m so confused by what you’ve done on that elbow on the supply. Am I tripping or did you hammerlock in a piece of duct to reduce the duct size? Could you not just use a transition there? Or even a change elbow? Also does that not remove one of the slips on that duct piece? Maybe I am tripping but that looks weird lol
Are you talking about the trunk line? I had to 90 over and then 90 back. They didn’t want to drop the entire ceiling so I had to take up as little room as possible. The left is the supply the right is the return
@@BradeyMooreah, gotta do what ya gotta do man 🫡
Perfect insulation
Thank you!
@@BradeyMoore I wish I had such a good ductwork installation in my house but whoever put my ductwork in just slapped it in never sealed it and it's not even on enough brackets I guarantee the ductwork in my basement is going to fall down sometime
@@jaedenspider877 well if you know so much fix it! Like stop talking shit about it and do it the way you think is best because its really fucking stupid being in the hvac trade and not having your own home done right.
Is it insulated on the inside (the main trunk line ) , and how do you seal everything..just asking
Cost wise I use mixing boxes and flex, what’s the cost difference In that and a all hard duct system? Like an average 2.5 ton system
No only the runs in an unconditioned space are insulated. The Hvac’s system and the uninsulated ductwork in fully inside the conditioned space so it is not required
@@BradeyMoore what’s the price difference
@@BradeyMoore just asking cause I’ve never priced one out
People never ask about it and these days just want to do the cheaper route
But personally I believe it’s the best way to run a duct system, a d insulate the outside, if in a unconditioned space
@@BradeyMoore here we would have to insulate even in a conditioned space
Duct mad close together bet the insulator had a helluva time 😂if it was me having to wrap it I’d charge extra
It’s inside of the house, doesn’t need to be insulated. Flex lines are ran over the garage area.
@@BradeyMoore inside or not pretty sure it’s still gonna sweat a good bit
India I am Mangal Dass working Round Ducting Square Ducting Carpenter
They let you pan the bay still? And on a supply?
No panning for supply just return
ANOTHER ONE?
How much?
Avoid that 90° degree.
Duct meh insulation nahi he!
Easier to insulate before it's hung
Mujhe bhi batao ye kaam ke liye
UEI COLLEGE LAS VEGAS PRESENT STUDENT
#HVACR GALVANIZED SHEET METAL DUCTWORK
super
Mastic?
Yeah this was in the early stages. Added some runs and buttoned it all up by the end
Beautiful 🤩
Thank you! Cheers!
What state is it?
Ohio
Inefficient design!!!
Why do you say that?
@@BradeyMoore As per standards there has to be atleast 2 feet distance between the elbow and the duct!!! Plus the fittings in this design are not aerodynamic that would result in more pressure drop hence increasing the load on the fan!!!
@@Her-Bone incorrect, and there are no elbows shown on supply runs in the short. I like how your saying hard pipe is not aerodynamic hahaha. The runs coming off the end of the right truck are returns. Also elbows are ducts.
@@BradeyMoore dear Bradley i could see one take off .. an elbow... Comming directly out of the duct with no aerodynamic design... The flow of air through it would cause lot of noise and pressure drop!!! Because of turbulence and swirl!!! Knowledge is a give nd take process!! My intention was not to insult u!
@@Her-Boneyoure still wrong. Its a return so it doesnt matter.
I m karigar
i do ducting work i am coming to australia i will get job there i am from india
I need Duct fitters job I have experience 9 years in middle East I am currently working Qatar
How is it working in Qatar?
@@BradeyMoore too much working here in Qatar most of project working AC DUCT. here connect child water pipe or gas pipe
Can I get job in your company
I know Qatar had a ton of work all at once too before the World Cup. Looked like very bad working conditions. Are things going well there now?
@@BradeyMoore yes sir now going well
Fuck that I cut duct board and run flex Fla!!
Lmao love it
Mujhe bhi karna hai ye me Kiya hu
wher are you bro canada?
Ohio!
sir you have vecancy I am h v a c air conditioner duct fitter and 15 years experience Gulf country in Kuwait
❤
Slip and drive is garbage I always used a slips on all sides. 😊
WTF?
Dutos de Alupir MPU e melhor
Ducted wrong per code in any state.
How so?
@@BradeyMoore Takeoff must be a minimum of 12” from the end of the duct. That’s national code and you are required to by whichever code is more stringent, whether it be local or national code. It is actually one of the questions on the test to get your HVAC license. The reason is so that the system can build up pressure and more evenly distribute to all of the takeoffs through the whole system. Think of it this way. Poke a bunch of holes in the sides of a straw and blow though it, the majority of the air comes out the end of the straw and minimal out the holes in the sides. Now block the end of the straw and blow though it again, now you get pressurized air being more evenly distributed out of all the holes in the sides of the straw and distributing to all areas not just the majority out the end.
@vardemanb correct, but they run you see on the end cap is return air not supply. Returns are fine to come off the end cap. Appreciate the time you took for the reply!
Yeah it's clean but in my opinion if it ain't duck sealed and insulated ya took the easy way out
Ap ka number do