Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU??

   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU?? #21  
This is an interesting post for me because I have a very noisy system as well and it has been from day one. So noisy that people can't hear each other when it's running. (I'm not an HVAC person, but I do read up on them and know what a manual J and manual D are. The HVAC installer did not.) The amount of noise varies depending on the fan speed. You have a flexible black band between the transition and the T piece, mine does not and probably should. It also sits directly on a wood platform that seems to act as a sounding board.

What I have done is to line the return air chamber with fiberglass insulation as a sound absorber. It helps but could be better. I'm thinking about trying the anechoic foam to see if that works better.

What I would like to do is to lift the unit and put vibration isolators under it. That will be a fair amount of work since gas and drain lines are involved in addition to the duct work having to be shortened. Anyone think that would help?
What kind of noise do you think you have? Air movement, fan noise, vibration, .... Fan noise by itself won't be helped by iso mounts.

You might post a pic. Possibly the wood platform is acting like a drum or sound board to amplify the noise.

There is fiberglas duct board which is intended for use in HVAC duct, but you may not want ordinary fiberglass particles blowing through your ducts. There are those who even question the use of fiberglas duct board, FWIW.
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU??
  • Thread Starter
#22  
You saying the fan speed is higher in heat mode than cooling mode ?
I always wired heat speed lower than cool speed. low to med. speed for heat and high speed for cooling
That is correct, normally,,
but the fan speeds of the air handler are dictated by the air handler instructions.
Heat mode needs a minimum CFM to move the heat from the heat pump coil, as well as TWO resistance heating units.
Cooling is only dealing with the temperature difference caused by the heat pump alone.

IIRC, you want higher CFM on cooling, so that the body senses cooling from air movement.
Air movement results in comfort, with less energy used.
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU?? #23  
……Air movement results in comfort, with less energy used….
Interesting you say that. I have said the same thing. I am surprised someone hasn’t come up with a smart home HVAC setup that is “always on” but blowing low and slow.
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU??
  • Thread Starter
#24  
Interesting you say that. I have said the same thing. I am surprised someone hasn’t come up with a smart home HVAC setup that is “always on” but blowing low and slow.
I didn't come up with that,,
that is what they taught us in HVAC school back in 1969,,
so, it is an old concept.

The blower on my heat pump has been "ON" since November 2020. (when it was installed)

When the fan setting of the thermostat is set to "ON", the blower will run at a very low speed when the heat pump is not operating.
This fan speed is probably 1/3rd (maybe only 1/6th?) the CFM's of the cooling fan speed.

The air coming out of each register is more like a slight draft from a leaky window,
rather than the air flow you would expect from a furnace.

I think the slight air movement makes the entire house more comfortable, and less "stuffy",,,
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU?? #25  
Interesting you say that. I have said the same thing. I am surprised someone hasn’t come up with a smart home HVAC setup that is “always on” but blowing low and slow.
We replaced our furnace and heat pump a couple of years ago, new system is Trane.
Had a few noise problems that the installer worked to fix, most of it was small air leaks around some of the seams in the air handler, amazing how much noise a minute leak can make! Another issue was condensate running out of the ductwork under the air handler, tuns out the factory default setting for the fan speed was too high for the size of the heat pump and was blowing the condensate out of the coil rather letting it drain down into the collection area to drain properly.
We use a Honeywell smart thermostat that does have a circulate setting that runs the fan on low to keep the air in the house circulating all the time.
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU??
  • Thread Starter
#26  
That block off plate is exactly for that air turbulence you speak of.

Every manufacturer does written instructions differently. I always remembered these.

Generally if you don't want to rip the duct work apart to get the exact size, look it up, and then pre fab a custom transition from the supply opening of the unit to a transition to the existing ductwork.
I am just thinking out loud, nothing firm, yet,,
I think I have come up with a novel way to install the block off plate.

I went to Lowes, and bought a 24"x36" piece of galvanized sheet.
It is so thin, (WAY thinner than 30 gauge) I am sure I could cut it with a pair of scissors. (I have WISS snips if necessary.)

After getting the sheet the correct shape, (maybe by cutting a cardboard pattern first)
I will cut the block off plate so that it is 1" too narrow.

I also purchased a 6 foot length of slip on black pipe insulation (it looks like a "pool noodle")
I will put a piece of the slip on pipe insulation on each side of the block off plate.
The "springiness" of the foam pipe insulation will hold the block off plate in place.
The inside of the plenum is insulated, so the foam pipe insulation will not be pushing against the steel plenum.

If I can not easily screw the block off plate in place, I plan on bonding the block off plate in place at the bottom with a can of Great Stuff spray foam.
That foam sticks to anything.

I will bond the bottom first, only using a small amount, so that it does not expand into the air handler.
Then I will bond the top in place using the Great Stuff, and maybe a few sheetmetal screws,,

That galvanized is so thin, I am sure I could easily bend the sheet into a 4" diameter tube, effortlessly.
The problem is that the metal is so thin, without backup, the metal might flap around when the fan revs up,,

If necessary, I can easily drill the plenum, and fill the entire void behind the block off plate with Great Stuff foam.

The black foam pipe insulation will also help smooth the transition from the side to the block off plate.
Everything needs to be smooth,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,,

I have to find the temp limit of Great Stuff foam.
I have to figure out how hot the plenum gets,,
What temp is the pipe foam "pool noodle" good for?

I could just cut the block off plate, screw it to the air handler,
then, stuff the void with rockwool, and then screw the block off plate to the plenum transition at the top.
Other than rockwool, I have fiberglass,,

Thinking about options is as much fun as doing the project!! :unsure: (y) :)
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU?? #27  
Cool. So my thoughts are spot on with others. I did not know heat pumps did this (always on). And while the “circulate” function is good, i envisioned a little more “smartness.”

A furnace with variable flame so it will self-adjust to real low once at temperature, then just burn low while the fan blows slow all while house sensors give feedback to the burners and fan so as to keep a steady temp.

i purposefully undersized my woodburner so that it can run constantly yet still feel very comfortable because the ”warm” (not hot) air is constantly coming out of the registers.
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU??
  • Thread Starter
#28  
OOPS, Great Stuff is NOT great above 240 degrees F,, so that foam is out,,

maybe I will look for some sort of silicone gasket to use,,
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU?? #29  
With low frequency rumbles, I think that thin is not your friend. Stiffness will limit the amount of travel from turbulence.

Personally, since ducts are next to impossible to actually clean, I try really hard not to put anything other than clean sheet metal into them. If it were me, I would do all of your shape management with tin snips (scissors) and screws or rivets.

YMMV...

All the best,

Peter
 
   / Home Furnace Air Handler Plenum Design help,, Anyone A GURU??
  • Thread Starter
#30  
I try really hard not to put anything other than clean sheet metal into them. If it were me, I would do all of your shape management with tin snips (scissors) and screws or rivets.
I do have some industrial gauge siding left from building my shed,, maybe 22 gauge, or even possibly thicker
I could cut a piece of that, and pop rivet the siding to the back of the shaped block off panel,

Smooth on the air side, ribbed in the void area,, Hmmm,,,
If I can not easily get in the plenum to install screws, maybe a strong magnet could hold the block off in place??
 

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