Saturday 12 January 2013

Thermal imaging gives the thumbs up!

For the last few weeks, I've been waiting impatiently for cold weather! Why? For the thermal imaging....

When the temperature is cold outside and the house is warm on the inside, any heat escaping through gaps in the building fabric can be seen by a thermal imaging camera. This shows up as hot spots (when viewed from the outside) or as cold spots (when viewed from the inside).

David Hill of Carbon Legacy visited with his thermal imaging camera and we went round the whole house looking for cold spots. We examined window reveals, door reveals and thresholds, wall-roof junctions, and every possible weak point we could think of.

To my huge relief, the results were very good.
- The insulation of walls, floor and roofs is clearly doing its job.
- Junctions between walls and roofs or walls and floors all looked pretty good.
- The window reveals and window sills were my main area of worry, but they were all very respectable too - the worst showed about a 2 degree difference between the cold spot at the corner of the window sill and the adjacent wall, the others were all below 1 degree difference.
- The windows themselves were very good (as you might expect of Green Building Store's triple glazed windows with insulation within the frames and Fakro's quadruple glazed roof-light).
- Where the air tightness work around the front door has not been completed yet, this showed a few cold patches - no surprises there.

Getting such a good result depends on a number of factors, for example: good detailing by the architect (thank you Gil!), the right products (e.g. pro-Clima tapes and membranes), a good builder (McCane Construction), quantity and quality of external wall insulation (Westville using the Permarock system) and the watchful eye of the insulation and air-tightness champion (me).

Of course, the ultimate measure of success for a low energy home is the low energy bill! But first the final bits and pieces have to be completed and then I'll want to see 12 monthly readings for gas and electricity (to compare with the pre-refurbishment readings). However, the signs so far are promising... gas use in December 2012 was a quarter of what it was in December 2010, in spite of the fact that the floor area has increased from 95 to 140 m2.

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