My friends just moved into a new (to them) home and invited us to the housewarming party. I made the faux pas of critiquing their HVAC system. This embarrasses the heck out of my wife and happens far too often. It’s very hard not to say something when you know so much about how these homes were built. In our area, I can look at the type and location of the supply registers and tell you which HVAC company designed and installed it.
Probably 95% of production homes in CA (and likely all over) suffer from undersized ducts, which results in airflows below 350 CFM per ton or so. Some much less. In the 2013 version of CA’s energy code they mandated a minimum of 350 CFM per ton and 0.58 watts per CFM. Think of 350 CFM per ton as a D- grade. One CFM less is a FAIL. The other way to think of it is as the very worst airflow you can have and still meet code. When I was designing a lot of production homes, I designed to an absolute minimum of 400 CFM/ton and they regularly tested out at closer to 500 cfm/ton because I was pretty safe sizing ducts. More airflow is generally better, especially in hot/dry climates.
A real quick and easy way to improve airflow in these types of homes is to replace the cheap “stamped face” registers with a “bar-type” register. These may go by different names but, basically, a stamped face register is the most common style. The entire face and the fins are all from one piece of sheet metal that was stamped and the fins were bent in or out. Bar type registers have a rectangular frame, but each fin is a separate piece of metal that can be individually adjusted (without bending anything). Both Lowe’s and Home Depot sell both kinds. (Search “ceiling registers”on their sites.) The easiest way to tell them apart is price. Bar type registers are roughly twice the price of the same size stamped face, which explains why stamped face are the most common in most homes. But even at $15-$25 each, it’s a cheap way to really improve airflow. A bar type register is rated for roughly twice the airflow at the same pressure drop and sound rating as a stamped face. I’ve often measured up to 20% increase in airflow by replacing a stamped face register with a bar type, occasionally more. When I lived alone in an apartment, I took all the registers off completely and it made a huge difference! Only an bachelor engineering nerd can get away with that, though. (No, “bachelor engineering nerd” is not a redundant term.)
Here is link to a 10×6 bar type register sold by Home Depot: bar type register
Here is link to a similar one sold by Lowe’s: bar type register
Note that the size 10×6 refers to the size of the register boot behind the register. The dimension of the register itself is about 1 3/4 inch bigger in both dimensions. So if you were to go through your house and measure the outer frame dimension of all your registers, you would subtract about 1.75 from each dimension to get the nominal size (round to the nearest inch). They come in pretty standard sizes, usually even numbers, 12×4, 10×6, 12×6, 8×4, etc. They might also come in steel or aluminum. Aluminum is a bit more expensive. Steel is fine unless you live in a humid area. They perform about the same.
You can also sometimes buy directly from your local HVAC supply house. Tell them you want something comparable to a “Shoemaker 950 series (aluminum) or 951 series (steel) bar type register”.
The only tools you need are a screw driver and maybe a razor knife if the registers are caulked in place. Only do this project if you are comfortable working over your head while on a ladder and the registers are easily accessible. Be super careful. I’ve seen registers located 20′ above the floor. Leave those alone. Hopefully the screws holding the registers in place are going into wood and not just sheet rock. If not, which happens too often, you may have to use some sheet rock anchors.
I suggest only replacing the registers in the more important rooms, such as family room, master bedroom, etc. Smaller rooms like bathrooms and laundry rooms usually are getting plenty of air. If you have rooms where you’ve closed down a register, no need to replace those. Also, if you live in a two story house served by a single, non-zoned system (one thermostat) try replacing just the downstairs registers first. See if you notice a difference.
While you’ve got the registers off, take some caulk or expansive foam and seal the gap between the sheet rock and register boot (sheet metal box that penetrates the sheet rock and that the register slips into). Make sure you can get the register back in before the caulk or foam dries.
If you do this let me know how it came out! Good luck. Be safe.
Jun 24, 2019 @ 20:30:27
Russ
Good article….. informative with “GEEK Talk.”
—Josué
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Aug 01, 2019 @ 13:26:05
I’ve always called these long throw registers. I’ve found them very important in basement heating when the register is ceiling mounted facing down. The long throw lets us push the warm air further down to avoid stratification.
Great to see the new post! Keep it up.
(I think ACCA manual J table 1A is phenomenally behind the times and rising temps!!!)
Aug 01, 2019 @ 13:45:00
Hi Chris,
Thanks for commenting. A while back, I was called out to a new, very nice, tract home that had 10′ ceilings downstairs and 9′ ceilings upstairs. The homeowner said that she was very cold on the first floor in the winter. The airflows were all actually pretty good. After talking to her some more, I discovered that she runs a day care nursery out of her house during the day and spends most of her time sitting on the floor with toddlers. I suggested changing our off the first floor ceiling registers to the “long throw” type and bumping up the heating fan speed to med-high. She couldn’t be happier.
Russ
Jun 17, 2020 @ 07:02:32
Russ – great blog – quick question as I’m struggling to find a clear answer. I’m considering buying a whole house ventilation system. The manufacturer rates the variable speed ECM driven fan from 1367 CFM to 5350 CFM using a 24 inch fan pulling air through a motorized damper (purpose is to seal off the attic from the house while not in use) and a 7 foot length of 20 inch flex hose. Looking at various tables (yours included) I see that a 20 inch flex hose is good for about 1700 CFM. How is it that the manufacturer is claiming up to 5350 CFM? I’m guessing 1700 CFM is for a 100 foot run… is that correct? Can you please share the calculation purely for education purposes… thank you!. By the way, the grill is 24.5 inches by 28.5 inches and the product I’m considering is the VentCool Vista 5.0 Whole House Fan.
Jun 17, 2020 @ 07:51:04
Hi Clifford,
That’s a very different kind of fan/duct system than an HVAC system. The table I show is for a much smaller fan that must move the air through a lot of things that eat up pressure such as evaporator coils, filters, fittings and very long lengths of ducts. That is why the ducts need to be so much bigger to ensure proper airflow. In a system like you are talking about it’s just a huge fan, a short duct and a couple grilles. You can move way more air. 5350 cfm through a 20″ duct seems high. It’s possible, but will probably be loud. The whole house fan manufacturer’s recommendations should be fine. Not sure what brand you are look at but I’ve done some research work with QC Manufacturing, makers of Quiet Cool fans and have been impressed with their product. Whatever size ducts they recommend, I’m sure are fine.
Good Luck!
Russ
May 14, 2022 @ 22:15:37
Hello Russ, thank you for the informative articles. Your advice how to aim the registers and switch to bar type registers have improved the performance of my HVAC system. It’s rare to find someone that is into proper building science and design, and even more rare for that person to give that advice away for free! Really appreciate you sharing your wisdom.
I recently had my HVAC system looked at and most “HVAC experts” I call are more salesmen and not real consultants. They only want to sell a new system without doing any sort of analysis or design: no Manual J load calcs, no Manual D duct design, and no looking at the rooms and existing supplies/registers. Unless you are an informed individual, you don’t know what you don’t know and get stuck with an expensive and poor solution. I am not any sort of expert myself, but have been trying to read up on the subject to better understand how my home works, how to take care of it, what to expect or ask from contractors. Thank again Russ for your wonderful blog.
May 15, 2022 @ 21:55:17
Hi Steven! Thanks very much for your comment. I’m happy it helped. There are a few very good contractors out there, but they can be a challenge to find. You are definitely on the right track. The should 1. regularly do Manual J/S/D calculations and 2. own and use diagnostic equipment, including a duct leakage tester, flow hood or flow grid to measure air flow and a blower door to measure house leakage. (2 out of 3 is OK, 3 out of 3 is A+)