Thursday, February 18, 2010

Infrared Point-and-shoot Thermometers: Cut Your Home Energy Use With This Tool And A Few Easy Tips

An infrared point-and-shoot thermometer can help you get a thorough understanding of where your home is losing heat in cold weather, or gaining it in summer. The more you know about where heat is entering or leaving your house, the more effective you'll be at controlling energy waste.


With an infrared point-and-shoot thermometer, you just move about the inside and outside of your home on a hot summer day or a cold winter evening, and point and shoot at windows, outside doors, walls, and other places where heat may leak through. The device helps you get a detailed picture of problems with insulation, sealing, or windows in need of an upgrade. 

Professional energy efficiency inspectors often use infrared imaging to show you where you're gaining or losing heat, but thermal imaging devices are expensive and the audit itself can run over $200. An infrared heat gun doesn't give you the same colorful printout, but they sell for about $50, so they put this detailed information within reach of the average person. 

Most infrared heat detectors come with a beam ratio of 1:12, which means that if you point the gun at a wall 12 feet away, then take a reading, you'll get a temperature reading for a one square foot area of the wall. These guns also come with a laser beam so you can see exactly what spot the reading was done from. 

I suggest beginning your thermal leak audit from outside. Standing 12 feet back, take a series of readings with your infrared gun to figure out what the reference temperature is. You are looking for the coldest temperature in winter, or the hottest in summer when the AC is on. 

Don't take readings on a sunlit wall, because it can mess up your results. Rather, wait for cloud cover, or for the sun to move. 

Note each reading on a sketch of the wall or in ordinary notes. Pay particular attention to window temperatures, as these are major sources of thermal loss both in hot and cold weather. You may want an inside helper to close shades and curtains after your first measurement so you can then note the impact of such window coverings on cutting thermal leaks. 

Where readings are considerably worse than your baseline (hotter in cold weather, colder in summer), take more measurements close by, to pinpoint the boundaries of the thermal leak. You may have gaps in, or settled insulation, cracks in the wall, or a broken seal in a window or door. 

Next do an indoor thermal audit of the outward-facing walls, floor, and ceiling of each room. Choose an interior wall as your baseline; exterior wall readings should be cooler than the baseline in cold weather, or warmer in hot weather. Again, you are after thermal leaks on window glass, around windows and doors, through ceiling light fixtures, in cracks in drywall or plaster, or anywhere that is touching an exterior wall. Take close-up measurements of any wall outlets or light switches that are close to the outside, even if they are on an interior wall. 

Take readings of top floor ceilings, as insulation, especially blown in insulation, can get pressed or matted down in leaky attics. For hot weather measurements, do your ceiling readings twice: once early in the morning before the sun has heated the attic space, and again in the early evening when the attic is hot, so you can see how much of that attic heat leaks into your living areas. 

You will probably find that windows without their window coverings will be your biggest heat leaks, as even the most efficient windows have a much lower thermal barrier capability than walls or ceilings. You can either upgrade old windows with new efficient ones, add thermal curtains or shades, or apply thermal barrier window film to the window pane itself. 

You will also probably find drafts in walls, particularly at light fixtures or where wires or pipes exit the home. You should seal these as best you can, as drafts can be major contributors to home energy costs. Seal around the edges of window frames; use wall outlet insulating foam to prevent air from flowing through the outlets. Your bricks may need tuck pointing, or you may have a more severe problem: settled blown-in insulation between wall studs, in which case the only remedy is to gut the room from within and put in new insulation and drywall. If the walls have no insulation at all you may just be able to inject foam insulation, which costs less than a complete gut and reno. 

You should consider doing your own mini-audit with your infrared point-and-shoot thermometer first, and call the contractors later. If you know where your thermal leaks are, you'll be able to ask each contractor what solutions they recommend to your problem. Inviting a contractor over and just telling them the house gets too cold in winter, or too hot in hot weather, means inviting major repairs that may not help at all.


You can use an infrared point-and-shoot thermometer for countless other measurements around the house, such as reading hot water pipe temperature before and after adding pipe wrap; reading the temperature coming out of forced air registers and going into the air return register, if you have central air conditioning, to gauge air conditioner efficiency; measuring frying temperatures on your stove; or finding the best location in your basement for a wine cellar. 

Whatever model infrared heat detector you choose, you will doubtless get many hours of use out of it, locating the hotspots and cold spots in your walls, floors and ceilings, your garage, your fridge, freezer, your car engine - anywhere you want to know the surface temperature. You can even use it to measure the temperature of your compost bin - without getting your hands dirty!

By: Robin from Green Energy Efficient Homes

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Monday, February 8, 2010

How To Build A Solar Panel From Scratch




Im not going to try and kid you. Solar panels are expensive. In fact, next to the storage batteries, solar panels make up the biggest financial barrier to most people converting to solar energy.

Now, you dont need batteries if you dont want to store your solar generated power to use at night and on cloudy days. But there is no way to produce solar energy without using solar panels.

But what if you save a bundle of money by making your own solar panels? And what if you didnt have to be an engineer or physicist to do it?

Well, you can. And I am going to show you how its done.

Required Tools

You probably already have most of the tools you need if youre an average DIY person. Otherwise, between your local home improvement and electronics store, you can get everything you need.
  • Hand or electric wood saw
  • Soldering iron or gun
  • Paint brush
  • Rosin flux pen
  • Wire cutters
  • Screwdriver
  • Caulking gun
  • Volt meter
  • Plexiglas cutters
  • Drill
Parts and Supplies
  • 3/8 or outdoor-grade plywood (4x8 sheet)
  • 4/8 sheet of Plexiglas
  • Tin wire
  • Electrical solder
  • Silicon caulk
  • UV-ray protective varnish
  • Solar Cells (available online or at electronic supply stores)
Ready? Lets get started.

Calculate the number of solar cells you need by considering that 80 cells will produce around 100 watts of power under ideal sunlight conditions. You need around 36 cells to charge an 18 volt battery.

Lay out your solar cells in rows and columns and then cut your plywood to a size necessary to support the dimensions you end up with. Most people use a rectangular layout, but that is not necessary. Use any layout pattern that works best with your roof and the number of solar cells youll be using per panel.

Apply the UV-ray protective varnish to all sides of your cut plywood.

Use the rosin flux pen to carefully apply flux to connector strips on each solar cell. Then use your solder and soldering gun/iron to connect each cell together.

Use dabs of the silicon caulk to attach the connected solar cells to the plywood panel.

Drill two small holes to accommodate the two wires leading from the last solar cell in your array. Feed the wires through the holes and then seal the holes with silicon.

Construct the frame that will support the Plexiglas and use silicon and wood screws to attach the frame to the plywood panel containing your solar cells.

Pre-drill screw holes in the Plexiglas. Then apply a bead of silicon around the edges of the Plexiglas where it will contact the frame. Press down to make a tight seal and then screw in the wood screws. Do not over-tighten or you could crack the Plexiglas.

Carefully inspect the assembled panel to make sure there are no gaps where moisture can enter. Seal any openings with silicon.

Drill a small hole on the bottom of the panel, away from all the electrical connections, allow air to circulate through the panel and remove condensation.

Guess what? Youve built a solar panel. Now that was easy, wasnt it?
By: Jakob Jelling