They measure the temperature in the room, which captures the effect of negative pressure pulling in hot air from the rest of the building. It underestimates the costs if the rest of the building is significantly cooler than the outside (I’d guess by the ballpark of 20-30% in the extreme case where you care equally about all spaces in the building, the rest of your building is kept at the same temp as the room you are cooling, and a negligible fraction of air exchange with the outside is via the room you are cooling).
Which… seems to misunderstand the actual problem of infiltration as it relates to heating efficiency? This is the only mention of the word infiltration in the whole article, and I can’t find any other section that discusses infiltration problems in other words.
I think that paragraph is discussing a second reason that infiltration is bad.
I think that paragraph is discussing a second reason that infiltration is bad.
Yeah, sorry, I didn’t mean to imply the section is saying something totally wrong. The section just makes it sound like that is the only concern with infiltration, which seems wrong, and my current model of the author of the post is that they weren’t actually thinking through heat-related infiltration issues (though it’s hard to say from just this one paragraph, of course).
They measure the temperature in the room, which captures the effect of negative pressure pulling in hot air from the rest of the building. It underestimates the costs if the rest of the building is significantly cooler than the outside (I’d guess by the ballpark of 20-30% in the extreme case where you care equally about all spaces in the building, the rest of your building is kept at the same temp as the room you are cooling, and a negligible fraction of air exchange with the outside is via the room you are cooling).
I think that paragraph is discussing a second reason that infiltration is bad.
Yeah, sorry, I didn’t mean to imply the section is saying something totally wrong. The section just makes it sound like that is the only concern with infiltration, which seems wrong, and my current model of the author of the post is that they weren’t actually thinking through heat-related infiltration issues (though it’s hard to say from just this one paragraph, of course).