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Build Podcast

The Tools Behind High-Performance Homes | Build Show Podcast Ep 213

πŸ“… April 20, 2026 ⏱️ 44:13 🎀 Matt Risinger, Bill Spohn, Eric "Elk"

Chapters

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  • 0:00
    Intro β€” Meet Bill & Eric of TruTech Tools
  • 4:24
    Inside TruTech Tools: curated tools for the field
  • 6:01
    Evaluating a home: start with the building shell
  • 7:38
    Top 3 tools every builder should own
  • 8:43
    Choosing the right smoke generator
  • 10:54
    Buying a thermal (IR) camera
  • 14:36
    IR training & the 3M 33+ emissivity tip
  • 17:17
    Budgeting the three-tool kit
  • 18:57
    "Okay" homes vs. truly great homes
  • 21:41
    Bill's volumetric modular home build
  • 26:04
    The tight-house comfort & thermostat dilemma
  • 32:07
    Getting young people into the HVAC trades
  • 39:47
    The European model & wrap-up

Speakers

M
Matt Risinger
Host
B
Bill Spohn
Co-Owner, TruTech Tools
E
Eric "Elk"
Trainer & Tool Specialist, TruTech Tools

Key Takeaways

✦

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, $500–$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 ~18–20Β°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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