Hi, universal advice is to not close door to save energy with a ducked whole house hvac.
I need a new system now and am doing research. I've come to disbelieve that advice. After all let's say i added a room to my home but didn't duck it and kept the door closed. Would my hvac system become unbalanced, have pressure differentials, and work harder? No, I dont think it would even know about that room.
I know technically if the door didnt completely seal air tight, it might be like leaving a window open 1\8". I consider that negligible.
Im also considering the size of the hvac unit. There is a range of sq ft house size for each ton of cooling\heating and if my home had a system larger then it needed, that would be inefficient & closing a door would compound that. However, if my unit was too small for my home, then closing a door (& maybe its duck too) would actually make my system work better. Now of course I expect the reply to be that advice on not closing door is based on house having proper size unit. However, there is a range of house sizes for each ton of heating\cooling recommended.
When I had my current unit installed in 2001 I mentioned that we might be converting garage to a room & then might want a duct added. 3 contractors said we need a two ton unit either way. 4th contractor said a 2 ton would work, but so would a 2.5 & he suggested that since we might be ducking the garage on a later date to go with 2.5. which he stressed would be fine if we never did the garage.
This is of course for a house with a single return that is not in a room being closed.
1952 house that had hvac system added. Return is at one end of house even though there is a closet in the center of house. Also the return is undersize according to the manufacturer's specs. Still, it's worked fine for 23 years.
Your thoughts?
Paul
.
I need a new system now and am doing research. I've come to disbelieve that advice. After all let's say i added a room to my home but didn't duck it and kept the door closed. Would my hvac system become unbalanced, have pressure differentials, and work harder? No, I dont think it would even know about that room.
I know technically if the door didnt completely seal air tight, it might be like leaving a window open 1\8". I consider that negligible.
Im also considering the size of the hvac unit. There is a range of sq ft house size for each ton of cooling\heating and if my home had a system larger then it needed, that would be inefficient & closing a door would compound that. However, if my unit was too small for my home, then closing a door (& maybe its duck too) would actually make my system work better. Now of course I expect the reply to be that advice on not closing door is based on house having proper size unit. However, there is a range of house sizes for each ton of heating\cooling recommended.
When I had my current unit installed in 2001 I mentioned that we might be converting garage to a room & then might want a duct added. 3 contractors said we need a two ton unit either way. 4th contractor said a 2 ton would work, but so would a 2.5 & he suggested that since we might be ducking the garage on a later date to go with 2.5. which he stressed would be fine if we never did the garage.
This is of course for a house with a single return that is not in a room being closed.
1952 house that had hvac system added. Return is at one end of house even though there is a closet in the center of house. Also the return is undersize according to the manufacturer's specs. Still, it's worked fine for 23 years.
Your thoughts?
Paul
.

