HVAC Ductwork BEST Practices Using SHURTAPE | Part 2
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- Опубліковано 5 жов 2024
- Continuing the HVAC ductwork fabrication series, here is part 2! I’ll show you my process on how I insulate the metal duct, secure and seal the branch line taps. I find this process to be pretty easy and effective. Using the right tapes is crucial in sealing the ducts properly, that’s why I use Shurtape. Quality products that I can trust. Hope you guys enjoy the video!
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Disclaimer I received compensation to complete this project for using Shurtape brand products. All opinions, projects and ideas are based on my own experience. - Фільми й анімація
I've been trying to find a decent about duct prep for a while..... this is good stuff... including important details many others miss.
You’ve been taught well.
I don’t see most taking time to work to this detail.
At this rate
He probably takes a month to do a rough in a house
It's b/c we aren't given this much time to do jobs. $0.02.
Most aren't making youtube videos as evidence of their labor
I beg to differ. Check out AGL Mechanical Tips
"Do your best, tape the rest" words to live by lol
hello I'm from Brazil . I'm learning English to better understand your videos. you have great tools, congratulations you are an excellent professional
I'm a sheet metal worker as well.....can't believe you stapled the insulation, but whatever works for ya! I definitely give you props for actually using an applicator on the foil tape though👍
There's a special type of Staple for stapling insulation like this.
I get that its a specialty staple,but you already have the foil tape in your hand so why not tape just tape it??
I've used old discarded, outdated credit cards as squeegees. Great video! Great instructions. Quality work!
Looking good! Only difference I do is when wrapping the insulation around the pipe, I’ll tape down that first thick end to the pipe itself before overlapping the end where you remove the insulation. I feel like I never have to worry about the insulation sliding off or moving before adding taps/installing in general.
@Chris O'harra glad im not alone on that haha
Good job. No many people care enough to seal. I just used 5 bucket of mud and 2 rolls of tape changing out my whole system. Stay safe great vid.
Ive always been able to wrap pipe up to 14 by laying the pipe parallel with the roll and just cutting at the end of the pipe instead of measuring.
Some of the best hvac content out there on this channel....
dang, this guy is a real craftsman. I wish I could hire him in my home state. He's a pro.
I just began my hvac career almost a year ago and love it. I watch your videos to learn as much as I can but also enjoy watching them!
Super talented, wish all HVAC techs cared this much...!!!! Love your tools and organization..
Great job. For those who can't do all that bending over(hernia), get two 8 ft. fold up tables and some sheetmetal and you have a great work table.
It's gonna be hard to work with it like that think about it
I love seeing your work beacuse of the pride you take on it to the small detail. Awesome work! God Bless
Great job damn the haters that is just jealous of your success my brother!
Thank you for a very helpful instruction video with detailed explanations. A big help.
Best installation technique on the internet. Love it
Great video! I am new to the trade and appreciate how you explain everything!
Damn that looks so good I I would set it in my living room as a piece of furniture
The mastic tape is a good touch, but as some of these novices should know, there are alternatives. One is, duct sealant mastic. It has the consistency of warm peanut butter. It is applied with a chip brush all seams are hit. The drawback is, to mastic the pipe after it’s hung because bending and movement may cause connections to crack open. It’s the best method if you have to have a pressure tested system. Many states are now requiring this, because of shoddy work done in the past. The drawback to mastic Tape is that it’s very expensive. My own house I used mastic inside and out. To include all lineal joints. I have a friend that owns a union shop, he says that they are not allowed to use more than 6’ of flex on each drop. Everything is hard pipe. The norm for an independent is the renowned “Octopus” of flex. In the Boston area he said they will make you rip it out and start ver.
I used duct seal mastic on my home with the ridgid already being in place when we moved in. Much easier than taping all the joints fussing with those rolls while in a crawlspace. Imbedded some mesh tape as well and sealed over that. Rock solid connections now. Now wrapping insulation is a whole different story down there ughhhhh
I like your attention to detail.
This man is probably the god of gift wrapping
Loving the videos Zach. Really good content brother. Congratulations on the growth of the channel as well.
The squeegee info was great. Thanks great videos
Thank you for showing your process. I do strictly service and it’s nice to finally see and comprehend how some installs are done.
Nice work
I wish I could take all my time at this jobs…
Like to see more duct work videos brotha! I'm mostly tech work so I need more practice on my duct work skills lol
here in sweden it is very cold in winter and watching you insulating that tube makes me feel warmer. thanks for gentle but steady handling of the duct situation. it clarified many things for me. however it also raised an important question, what is this tube for? thank you
Its an air duct. For Heating and Cooling the home. When theyre manufactured via sheet metal in some areas you have to insulate them well or theyll sweat and give you a free rainforest inside your home
Looks great. Nice tutorial. Great piece. 👍✌️😁😉
I need to hire someone that cares this much. Nobody wants to do a good job anymore
Similarly nobody wants to pay for a good job
@@Bottomshelf988 exactly, most of my clients do not want to “overspend” for a good quality work instead they go with cheapest bid
We do work exactly like this in North West Washington State. West Mechanical Heating is where I work. For a full custom all metal duct system expect to pay $10,000 to $15,000. It's about 5 days of work plus material.
I’m starting as an Apprentice monday and I like watching these videos because it gives me ideas of what I’m getting into and I promise if I carried his knowledge I’d care as much
@@McMuffin2002 my best advice would be to always be honest with your customers and do what you say you will do and beyond. And to always keep learning... I'm still learning hvac/r after 12 years.
Looks great! Definitely recommend staggering the branch taps for increased plenum pressure. Love the videos, keep them coming!
Go back to school , staggering has nothing to do with pressurization , flow , static
@@ynot6781 It does. Take your own advice!
Your videos are super helpful for me being a new apprentice. I have insulating down pretty well, but we make a fold on both sides and use staples that clamp shut like regular staples and we use a lot more duct butter than tape. What I'm having trouble with is insulating elbows. How do you insulate 45 and 90 degree duct elbows? Thank you for your time!
Make a pattern that's in the shape of a fish.
I think this guy started his career at NASA!
Looks great. What brand of cinch stapler are you using? Like it?
I'm not sure for all brands but I think most brands of foil back give you the measurements on the packaging to wrap different size ductwork
Amazing work. But if I took this long to do a job I'd be fired lol
I watched some HVAC installers build duct board plenums once. They were using a machine to cut the duct board and I couldn’t believe how fast they worked.
It's good to be king - Tom Petty ;)
You might be working for the wrong company. The customer would appreciate the extra effort to do the best work you can.
It’s all circunstancial. You either work for a company that has just sells sells sells and always has their workers on gear 9. Or you own a company and do your jobs at your own pace and make them look clean.
Lol I hear that
This is fantastic info my guy - nice work!
Love it man, always pumping out quality videos. Keep it up!
I always take size of pipe x4 +4”
To get the total inches required for a wrap?
Another great video brotha!!! Clean as always. 👨🏻🔧💪🏼
Love all the Milwaukee gear you rock 😎
Very well done
You did it just how I would do it at my house...👍
Just subscribed. Your videos are very informative and helpful
You super talented.
I use the bubble wraps because they’re much fast and they insulate pretty well
Do you wrap twice?
Isn’t bubble’s R value really only like 4.3
Seamless work Zach
Nice job and video
Awesome video. Very professional work
Man I worked in commercial installation and the amount of time this would take on a large scale would be absurd! This would be nice to milk the clock for a homeowner, but not in a job site setting. Duct butter/pookie/mastic is much faster, but it's very messy if you're new at it.
Ah, I remember years ago when I first started the trade my first two weeks thats all I did. I'd look like I took a bath in it by the end of the day...damn near ruined ever pair of jeans I owned. good ol' Duct Butter!
Love the work and videos that you do. Keep it up Zach!!! Curious on which staple gun that you use in this video? Thanks.
Looks like a Bositch T5. Called an outward cinch stapler. Bends the short ends of the staple outwards to grab the strings in the insulation.
Being in Nashville I'd guess you've done a few recording studio installs. What do you differently w/ the ductwork to keep them quiet? Love what you are doing with your channel, nice going.
Im in Manchester tn. Hvac!!
Very nice job bro
Nice clean work bro 👍
Awesome video brother, I have been doing installs for a little while now but this was some great info. Not sure what cost more but do you prefer installation over the bubble wrap?
Very nice work!
Do you stagger your taps?! To allow more back pressure inside duct, or do you just have them directly across from one another!?
I noticed the same thing 😂
Wont matter....the hardest heat lead is the 1 after the reducer....its called aspiration.....
Nice job .
Where is HVAC Ductwork BEST Practices Using SHURTAPE | Part 3 of two years go time frame? I've done a search but can't find it. Part 1&2 are GREAT!
Awesome as always 👏🏼
I use to connect wyes all day for 8hrs at ac pro. That was one itchy job. The ty or wye is the metal thing you connect to the duct, it allows you to connect two pieces of duct together. But it wasn’t always wye or ty’s it was all sorts of metal applications some of them square.
Nice thank you for sharing
Great work. What staple gun is that? I’ve been on my knees fussing with FSK take every time I have to wrap Duct. That stapler will change my life!
Nice work
Looks awesome and is 100% correct but damn how the hell u make money taking all the time to tape every little thing like that??
I was thinking the same thing! Must spend $50+ per install just on tape haha
He probably has very minimal call backs and his customers are getting the correct airflow with no money lost in the seams.
he gets paid to advertise products. no way he always does this.
@@breadgarlisauce1932 I must say I agree. Insulating ductwork takes forever but I'd probably get a long talkin to at the shop after the job on why I bought 15 rolls of each tape. That shit ain't cheap. I use ductseal on the joints and then insulate. But he works for himself, its nicer when you can take time to make everything perfect because its your name on the product.
Took 17 mins on one duct. Would be fired on my crew.
Great video, talk about that staple gun. How do the staple ends curl, in order to hold the two pieces together? Wouldn’t the staples just fall out the same way they went in. Being just foil as a material.
It's an outward clinch stapler. I have the same one he uses in this video, but I prefer the arrow t50oc. It pushes the curls outward so it would have to rip through the backing on the insulation. Just enough to hold it in place well enough and the tape locks it all down.
What size staples?
Can you staple bubble wrap? If so what size staples?
What is the name of that duct insulation?? Great job 👏🏻 I need it 🤩
Was there ever a part 3 for this?? I can't find it :(
Can you make a video on insulating odd elbows or angles ?
Nice work, when stapling doesn't the staples go through the metal those creating possible hangups on the inside
No, the staples only catch the insulation.
But why does the orientation of the damper handle (?) matter if the take off is the other way? You were about to say it and stopped. I need to know. Lol
How do the air duct cleaning ? Is it a HAVC maintenance company or special company for duct cleaning ?
Quality work!
What type of stapler gun did you use? I bought one but the staples aren't grabbing the insulation. Thanks 👍🏻
Is that just a regular stapler or something specialized for this?
Please do a video on a 90 elbow
If the insulation is 3" thick shouldn't you calculate circumference for 20" diameter plus 3" overlap so you don't compress the fiberglass and lose R value? If you cut the insulation to 54" on 14" duct doesn't it get compressed to about an inch thick?
I think you are more correct than what’s shown in the video. According to the document below, the stretch out dimensions for 3” of insulation on round pipe are P + 17” (includes 2” tape flap). I’ve used this approach and the insulation does appear to fit quite loose, but that is certainly better than too tight.
See pages 28-29:
insulationinstitute.org/wp-content/uploads/2015/11/AH121.pdf
Hello, i am interested in this type of duct, where can i purchase it?
Spent 15 years in the field. Now I'm making more money as an industrial maintenance guy. No more attics or crawlspaces. No more working in the elements.
Clean work. What is the make and model of the stapler?
love these!
In this video you used shurtape for the tap, on an older video, you used mastic... is this tape better, the same easier or maybe mastic is better is some instances or vice versa? thanks for the great videos.
They both have a time and place. If i was sealing the lock joint on pipe id use the tape since its a straight line. If i was doing a tap or pipe to pipe id use actual mastic since i can just run the brush around the circle rather than fighting with tape. Thats just my two scents
If my math is correct and it is.
You have 2) 8” taps and 2) 6” taps which is 600 cfm going through a duct that can deliver 800 cfm then reducing to a duct that delivers 600 cfm. That 12” reduced duct should only deliver 200 cfm’s because 600 of the 800 cfm’s are already being distributed before it hits the 12” duct. Something isn’t adding up to me but I could be wrong. Doubt I am though.
No I was thinking the same thing but I was waiting for my old man human HVAC calculator to triple check 🙃 Here he is now
Looks clean. But imagine doing this in the crawl soace attic. 😥
My boss would kill me if i took that long to wrap one pipe hahahaha wouldve fired me as soon a he saw me using staples and ripping out the insulation on the overlap 🤣🤣🤣
Did part 3 ever come out?
Great video very informative but why not just use insulation sleeves from your supply house? Much faster and less labor costs
In your opinion, what lasts longer mastic or tape? I'm reading mastic last longer or is tape tech on par?
What kind of insulation is this guy using? Brand name please?
Hey can you show us how to insulate a 90 degree steel elbow
Do you ever just slide flex duct over your metal pipe?
Where can you buy the insulation?
Great work!
What brand stapler is that youre using for the insulation?
Could u use reflextix to wrap it instead?
Almost every time Ive wrapped duct I didn't have the luxury of holding the duck with my legs The duck is always been hung so you got it made on your little video there bud
And yes your gonna use alot of staples 😉