[Equest-users] Attachments in the Archive (was Re: Zoning Issue)

Jason Glazer jglazer at gard.com
Wed Nov 10 11:40:16 PST 2010


The archives now include links to attachments using the 
original names of the attachments.

Nick's email is at:

http://tinyurl.com/2g964sc

If you scroll all the way to the bottom, you can click on 
the links and see all the various graphics that were attached.

I requested this change in the way archives work from the 
web host that hosts onebuilding.org.

Jason

On 11/10/2010 1:31 PM, Nick Caton wrote:
> Someone asked me a pointed question and I’d had to misguide
> anyone. Added an extra line to my response below to clarify
> my position.
>
>
> I also remembered that you won’t be able to actually view
> that particular “mini-guide” in the archives I referenced as
> it was all pictorial – sorry! I’ve re-attached the guide
> pictures and copied the discussion that prompted it below
> for your reference.
>
> ~Nick
>
> cid:489575314 at 22072009-0ABB**
>
> **
>
> *NICK CATON, E.I.T.***
>
> PROJECT ENGINEER
>
> 25501 west valley parkway
>
> olathe ks 66061
>
> direct 913 344.0036
>
> fax 913 345.0617
>
> /Check out our new web-site @ /www.smithboucher.com__
>
> *From:*equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org
> [mailto:equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org] *On
> Behalf Of *Nick Caton
> *Sent:* Wednesday, November 10, 2010 11:25 AM
> *To:* Brian Fountain; RJTHEACMAN at aol.com;
> equest-users at lists.onebuilding.org
> *Subject:* Re: [Equest-users] Zoning Issue
>
> In full support of Brian’s response, I’d add one extra tidbit:
>
> Post-wizards, I would generally take the “delete the wall”
> approach 9 times out of 10 without a second thought. In the
> event you do feel the mass of the common wall has a
> significant thermal lag effect you don’t want to eliminate
> in your model, I’d advise still just deleting the wall and
> bumping up the value for the furniture mass (located under
> the contents tab for the space in question).
>
> Creating an interior wall to match a wizard-generated
> exterior (which I’ve written a mini guide on, btw *– see
> attached pictures and discussion copied below*) is something
> I’d generally only advocate if model aesthetics are critical
> (the 3D view). *The exception is where you are talking about
> being adjacent to a space of significantly different
> conditioning – in that case creating an interior wall and
> tying the spaces together would be a very sensible thing to
> pursue from a modeled accuracy perspective.*Deleting the
> wall surface entirely is a quick solution, but has the side
> effect of giving you superman-like xray vision powers when
> in the 3D view… this has raised eyebrows in my experience
> and I have had to explain the modeled behavior is not what
> it looks like.
>
> Personally, I reserve and maintain the right to make ugly
> models whenever it saves me time and doesn’t hinder
> accuracy, but to each his/her own ;).
>
> ~Nick
>
> cid:489575314 at 22072009-0ABB**
>
> **
>
> *NICK CATON, E.I.T.***
>
> PROJECT ENGINEER
>
> 25501 west valley parkway
>
> olathe ks 66061
>
> direct 913 344.0036
>
> fax 913 345.0617
>
> /Check out our new web-site @ /www.smithboucher.com__
>
> *From:*equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org
> [mailto:equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org] *On
> Behalf Of *Brian Fountain
> *Sent:* Wednesday, November 10, 2010 9:44 AM
> *To:* RJTHEACMAN at aol.com; equest-users at lists.onebuilding.org
> *Subject:* Re: [Equest-users] Zoning Issue
>
> You will have to define the common wall as an "adiabatic"
> interior partition -- no heat transfer and no solar load. In
> the wizard you can do this by clicking on the wall (in Shell
> screen 2 of the DD wizard) and then selecting adiabatic. In
> detailed mode you can also delete a exterior wall and then
> create an interior partition of type adiabatic. You could
> also simply delete the common wall -- this also has no solar
> and no conduction load. The only thing this does is
> decreases the room's thermal mass slightly (not of
> significance likely).
>
> There is no way to create and interior partition and to
> force the temperature of the adjacent space -- you would
> have to create the "next to" zone if you really want to
> model heat transfer between new and existing. Unless the
> occupancies are significantly different, the impact of
> conduction across that wall is likely negligible.
>
> Good luck.
>
> BF
>
> On 11/10/2010 10:36 AM, RJTHEACMAN at aol.com
> <mailto:RJTHEACMAN at aol.com> wrote:
>
> I am modeling an addition to an existing building. The new
> addition has three perimeter exposures and the fourth
> exposure is up against the existing building, which is a
> conditioned space.
>
> How do I tell equest that one of my exposures is not a
> perimeter wall but it is basically a partition with a
> conditioned space adjacent to it?
>
> Thanks
>
> Richard J. Dominick, P.E.
> TEC Engineers LLC.
> The Energy Consultant
> 304 Main Avenue, Suite 426
> Norwalk, CT. 06851
> Phone: 203-722-5206
> Fax: 203-849-0781
>
>
>
>
>
> _______________________________________________
>
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>
>
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>
> *From:*Nick Caton
> *Sent:* Tuesday, June 22, 2010 10:02 AM
> *To:* Nick Caton; Sami, Vikram; Reba Schaber;
> equest-users at lists.onebuilding.org
> *Subject:* RE: [Equest-users] make exterior wall an interior
> wall
>
> Alright folks…
>
> This is one of a number of things I really wish someone
> walked me through when I was new to this – so pay attention
> if you’re learning =)!
>
> Attached images are a “visual guide” walking you through
> changing an external surface into an adiabatic internal
> surface in detailed mode. It took me 10 minutes to pull
> these together, but 99% of that was spent creating/naming
> the images. The process is simple.
>
> Also, If _anyone_ can answer this: Is there any plan or
> consideration to have images and other attachments like this
> included in the mailing list archives for future reference?
> I think it’s a bummer that so many miss out on really
> important email attachments (excel tools, example files,
> studies, and other time savers). If it were possible, I and
> others might be more inclined to generate this sort of
> “mini-guide” visual response knowing others could find and
> reference such information in the future.
>
> ~Nick
>
> cid:489575314 at 22072009-0ABB**
>
> **
>
> *NICK CATON, E.I.T.*
>
> PROJECT ENGINEER
>
> 25501 west valley parkway
>
> olathe ks 66061
>
> direct 913 344.0036
>
> fax 913 345.0617
>
> /Check out our new web-site @ /www.smithboucher.com__
>
> *From:*equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org
> [mailto:equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org] *On
> Behalf Of *Nick Caton
> *Sent:* Tuesday, June 22, 2010 9:07 AM
> *To:* Sami, Vikram; Reba Schaber;
> equest-users at lists.onebuilding.org
> *Subject:* Re: [Equest-users] make exterior wall an interior
> wall
>
> As further clarification,
>
> If you delete any wall/ceiling/roof, you (1) remove both a
> source of heat storage (thermal mass) while also (2)
> removing any heat transfer across that surface. As a
> caution: Losing the first effect can be a lot more
> significant that you might assume, depending on what you’re
> looking into.
>
> If you instead change any interior surface type to
> “adiabatic” (in the same wizard/detailed places you might
> select “air” or “internal”), you will remove heat transfer
> while retaining the thermal mass of the construction. This
> may be the best route when trying to study a perimeter
> classroom in isolation, for example.
>
> Quirky thing is, you can’t change an exterior surface type
> (roof/floor/wall) to adiabatic, so as Vikram is saying you
> have to first create an interior surface, copying across the
> geometrical properties (polygon, vertices, azimuth…), then
> delete the exterior surface. Make sure to define and assign
> an interior surface construction (layers) if the Wizards
> haven’t already set this up for you.
>
> ~Nick
>
> cid:489575314 at 22072009-0ABB**
>
> **
>
> *NICK CATON, E.I.T.*
>
> PROJECT ENGINEER
>
> 25501 west valley parkway
>
> olathe ks 66061
>
> direct 913 344.0036
>
> fax 913 345.0617
>
> /Check out our new web-site @ /www.smithboucher.com__
>
> -----Original Message-----
> From: equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org
> [mailto:equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org] On
> Behalf Of Sami, Vikram
> Sent: Monday, June 21, 2010 9:20 PM
> To: Reba Schaber; equest-users at lists.onebuilding.org
> Subject: Re: [Equest-users] make exterior wall an interior wall
>
> Reba,
>
> If you've gone through the wizard your interior and exterior
> walls should be in tehir correct places.
>
> Interioir walls should separate two spaces, and will define
> heat transfer between those two spaces. You normally have to
> define which space is on the other side.
>
> Exterior walls define heat transfer between the space and
> the outside.
>
> If you are in detailed mode, you can delete one and create
> the other as a child component to the space. When you say
> large air space - is that the air cavity in the wall? I'm
> not sure what resistance eQUEST attributes to the larger air
> gaps, but in reality air cavities over a certain size (I
> think 1 inch is probably the upper threshold) increase their
> convective heat transfer and the cavity resistance should go
> down (not up).
>
> If your just looking to make it adiabatic, I think you
> should be fine with just deleting the wall. You will lose
> the thermal mass of the wall material though.
>
> I would model it as an interior wall - especially if there
> is a space on the other side.
>
> ________________________________
>
> From: equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org
> [equest-users-bounces at lists.onebuilding.org] On Behalf Of
> Reba Schaber [Rschaber at PHMECH.COM]
>
> Sent: Monday, June 21, 2010 9:43 PM
>
> To: equest-users at lists.onebuilding.org
>
> Subject: [Equest-users] make exterior wall an interior wall
>
> I’m running a simulation on just a portion of a building.
> eQuest sees all walls of the polygon as exterior walls. In
> reality some walls are interior and will not have heat
> transfer. Is there any way to make eQuest see those walls as
> interior walls? I’ve thought of defining those walls with
> super insulation and a large air space so heat transfer is
> negligible. Anyone tried that?
>
> Reba Schaber Mechanical Engineer, P.E.
>
> LEED Accredited Professional
>
> This email and any files transmitted with it are
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> are not the named addressee you should not disseminate,
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