The Tools Behind High-Performance Homes | Build Show Podcast Ep 213
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Start any home evaluation with the building shell/envelope β the HVAC makes "expensive air" and the shell has to contain it, so envelope performance drives the size and behavior of everything else.
The three tools every builder should own for home performance: a blower door (measures total volumetric leakage), a thermal camera (verifies the insulation was done right), and a handheld smoke generator (pinpoints where the leaks actually are).
Budget roughly $5,000 to start: about $3,900 for a blower door, $500β$1,000 for a good thermal camera, and around $200 for a spot smoke generator like Retrotec's Air Tracer.
Thermal cameras show temperature differences, not absolute readings β you need an ~18β20Β°F indoor/outdoor delta to see anything, and glass reflects, so stick 3M 33+ black electrical tape (emissivity ~0.95) on a surface for an accurate spot reading.
New construction splits into two buckets β code-minimum "okay" homes and genuinely high-performance homes β and even multimillion-dollar houses can be terrible performers hiding behind beautiful finishes.
Building tight has trade-offs: a super-insulated, airtight home barely gains solar heat, which can spark comfort and thermostat battles β multiple HVAC zones (e.g., a dedicated cooler bedroom zone) help solve them.
To grow the trades, the industry must pay a living wage during training, protect workers' bodies from long-term wear, and respect work-life balance β and could learn from the European model that treats craft and professional tracks as equals.
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