Engineered Systems - November 2008 - (Page 70) Tomorrow’sEnvironment BY HOWARD MCKEW, P.E., C.P.E. ONE SMALL STEP For The TAB Industry Procedure and software work to tap TAB’s full potential. Regular readers are aware of my quest to elevate the air and water testing, adjusting, and balancing (TAB) contractor to a third-party TAB firm working in sync with the third-party commissioning firm instead of a being a subcontractor to the mechanical contractor. During this period, our firm has been very successful with making this happening on jobs where we are the owner representative or commissioning firm. My analogy of what a commissioning firm and a TAB firm do together is to draw upon the making of an automobile. The commissioning engineer (a.k.a. commissioning/car technician) is responsible for making sure all the interactive electronics work (electric door package, etc). The equivalent to the TAB engineer when building a car is another car technician who is responsible for tuning up the vehicle so that the vehicle will achieve the rated mpg noted on the invoice sticker and posted on the car window. When it comes to a building project, the commissioning engineer can verify that the systems interact per the basis of design, whether the building is operating at 28 mpg or 18 mpg. It is up to the TAB engineer to tune up the building so that the energy consumption is achieved per the basis of design. A FIRM COMMITMENT Integral to our firm’s commitment of championing third-party TAB is the writing of the Division 18 specification (commissioning being Division 17). We insist the TAB firm use the standards they publish in their organization’s book (e.g., AABC National Standards for Total System Balancing or NEBB Procedural Standards for Testing, Adjusting, and Balancing for Environmental Systems). Interestingly, getting the TAB firm to follow their own industry standards after years of not being able to apply their procedures (TAB services routinely selected as a subcontractor to the HVAC contractor on low price) has been a challenge. You see that “deer in the headlights” look when you remind them to go to the job site and then submit their field report and attach their pre-TAB observation checklists per the specification and their organizations standards. We also specify the TAB firm complete a design review and submit their comments early in the project preferably at the time of the trade contractor’s field coordination drawing phase. We want their expert opinion on the ability to air- and water-balance the HVAC systems long before ductwork and pipe have been installed. Leading up to the shop drawing submittal phase, Division 18 specifies the TAB firm shall submit system flow diagrams noting what they have determined to be the design engineer’s pressure drops before and after each air and water system component as they build the system profile. GETTING IN SYNC To help this process along, I have created the TAB 1-2-3™ process in sync with the Commissioning 1-2-3™ process, which includes a system flow diagram software (TAB-3) that both a designer or a TAB engineer can use to establish the air system static pressure profile or the water 70 En gi neer ed Sy stem s November 2009 You see that deer in the You see that “deer in the headlights” look whe you headlights” look when you remind g id them to them to go to the job site and then to the job site and then i sub submit their field report and attach bmit th ir fi hei ield report and attach thei pre-TAB observation their pre-TAB observation eir e servatio checklists checklists per the specification the spec fication p cati and their organi ations standards. and their organizati tdd system pump head profile. After the TAB firm has created and submitted his system flow diagrams, he can then use these flow diagram documents to insert the actual pressure drops when doing the actual adjusting and balancing of the system. When an actual pressure drop reading is significantly different from the design estimated pressure drop, the TAB firm will be able to immediately recognize this and get the design engineer involved if needed. To quote Mr. W. David Bevirt, P.E. (NEBB Environmental Systems Technology manual): “Testing, adjusting, and balancing personnel no longer can be just instrument readers, they must understand fully how to perform their work. Furthermore, they must understand at least the fundamentals of how these systems function, and use this knowledge to determine what is malfunctioning and how to correct it.” A byproduct of the TAB-3 software system flow diagrams and its design-to-actual data is the ability to toggle “on” data for each of the flow diagrams (wide open flow, maximum flow, minimum flow) and print each diagram out, laminate the diagrams, and then bind the entire collection of flow diagrams into a TAB system book. These individual system books can then be hung on the associated unit for quick reference in the future when spot-checking system performance, troubleshooting, or considering alterations that would affect the system. These books should also be included in the final electronic TAB report. Air and water balancing is as important as commissioning and its encouraging to see that we are making progress in elevating the TAB process, getting better results, and receiving better final documents. If you want to learn more, check out my podcast at www.esmagazine.com and go to my website at www.buildingsmartsoftware.com to learn more about TAB 1-2-3™. ES McKew is director, Building Solutions Group, RDK Engineers. (Andover, MA). Reach him by e-mail at hmckew@RDKengineers.com. For more online publications, visit www.buildingsmartsoftware.com. http://www.esmagazine.com http://www.buildingsmartsoftware.com http://www.buildingsmartsoftware.com http://www.buildingsmartsoftware.com http://www.buildingsmartsoftware.com
Table of Contents Feed for the Digital Edition of Engineered Systems - November 2008 Engineered Systems - November 2008 Contents Editor’s Note HVAC Challenge Back2Basics Case In Point Commissioning Building Automation HVACR Designer Tips Show Me The Motor Money The IAQ Top 10 Putting A Damper on Tragedy Special: Lighting Controls Computers & Software Products Glossary Classifieds Advertiser Index Tomorrow’s Environment Engineered Systems - November 2008 Engineered Systems - November 2008 - (Page Intro) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Engineered Systems - November 2008 (Page Cover1) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Engineered Systems - November 2008 (Page Cover2) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Engineered Systems - November 2008 (Page 3) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Contents (Page 4) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Contents (Page 5) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Editor’s Note (Page 6) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Editor’s Note (Page 7) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - HVAC Challenge (Page 8) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - HVAC Challenge (Page 9) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Back2Basics (Page 10) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Back2Basics (Page 11) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 12) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 13) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 14) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 15) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 16) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 17) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 18) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Case In Point (Page 19) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Commissioning (Page 20) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Commissioning (Page 21) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Building Automation (Page 22) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Building Automation (Page 23) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - HVACR Designer Tips (Page 24) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - HVACR Designer Tips (Page 25) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Show Me The Motor Money (Page 26) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Show Me The Motor Money (Page 27) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Show Me The Motor Money (Page 28) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Show Me The Motor Money (Page 29) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 30) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 31) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 32) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 33) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 34) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 35) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 36) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 37) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 38) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 39) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 40) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 41) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - The IAQ Top 10 (Page 42) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Putting A Damper on Tragedy (Page 43) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Putting A Damper on Tragedy (Page 44) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Putting A Damper on Tragedy (Page 45) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Putting A Damper on Tragedy (Page 46) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Putting A Damper on Tragedy (Page 47) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Putting A Damper on Tragedy (Page 48) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Putting A Damper on Tragedy (Page 49) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 50) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 51) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 52) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 53) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 54) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 55) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 56) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 57) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 58) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 59) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 60) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Special: Lighting Controls (Page 61) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Computers & Software (Page 62) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Products (Page 63) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Glossary (Page 64) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 65) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 66) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 67) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Classifieds (Page 68) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Advertiser Index (Page 69) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Tomorrow’s Environment (Page 70) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Tomorrow’s Environment (Page Cover3) Engineered Systems - November 2008 - Tomorrow’s Environment (Page Cover4)
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