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Inspection: David Valley (r.) inspects a skylight in Meghan Kaiserman’s home during an energy audit of her home in Middleton, Mass. (Ann Hermes/The Christian Science Monitor)

Energy audits: A high-tech way to stay warm this winter

Inspectors turn to infrared cameras to spot air leaks that the eye cannot.

By Mark Clayton  |  Staff Writer for The Christian Science Monitor/ November 11, 2008 edition

Ann Hermes/The Christian Science Monitor

Leak Seeker: Home inspector David Valley uses a thermal camera to spot where heat has escaped from Meghan Kaiserman’s home. Dark colors indicate where cold areas are.


Middleton, Mass.

After home heating oil prices surged last winter, Meghan Kaiserman decided this fall to get ahead of any price spike and go thermal – that is, she chose to get a thermal-imaging home-energy audit.

So, on a recent chilly morning, Ms. Kaiserman and thermal-energy auditor David Valley walked through her large 1940s ranch-style home, stopping every few steps to examine a color screen on Mr. Valley’s camera. The device scans walls and other surface temperatures in the infrared spectrum – heat energy invisible to the human eye – and displays them as colors. Blue, dark purple, and black indicate cold levels; white, orange, and red represent warm areas. Snapshots of walls become part of a home’s thermal documentary.

“See those blue and black streaks set against the orange background – that’s cold air whispering into your house,” Valley says, his finger tracing onscreen an eerie purple line where wood paneling abuts her stone chimney. “This is really you helping to heat the great outdoors.”

Garden-variety home-energy audits have been around since at least the 1970s, of course. Then, as now, it’s still mostly a low-tech job in which a homeowner or contractor embarks on a hands-and-knees hunt for air leaks around electric outlets, window frames, crawl spaces, doors, and fireplace dampers. Any gaps are plugged with caulk or insulation.

But rising home heating prices and falling technology costs have combined in the past year or so to make home-energy audits more high tech and precise than ever.

For $350 to $500, a thermal audit can not only discover where energy is wasted, but also pinpoint mold as well as termite or water damage behind walls.

The audits rely on thermal-imaging technology developed years ago by the US Defense Department to help soldiers spot the enemy at night. For years, big companies also used the technology to spot overheating equipment in factories or leaks in roofs. But only recently have costs dropped to the point where it can be used on the residential commercial level.

The technology, built into the chassis of a digital camera, costs a home inspector about $5,000 today, compared with perhaps $25,000 a few years ago. As a result, a small but growing number of home inspectors have become armed with thermal-imaging cameras.

“Home inspectors across the country are recognizing that this is a technology they can use to make money and provide a more efficient and accurate home inspection,” says Tom O’Toole, business development manager for FLIR Systems of Billerica, Mass., which also makes military and commercial thermal-imaging systems.

Over the past year or two, requests for the technology have soared, says Nick Gromicko, founder of the International Association of Home Inspectors. Of 9,000 home inspectors in the association, about 1,300 are “infrared certified” having completed a course to ensure they can properly identify what the camera is displaying.

“Most folks just want to save money on their heating bill,” Mr. Gromicko says. “We’ve found some people, though, who are using thermal-energy audits to help sell their house. So they can use the report to prove how energy efficient their home is to a prospective buyer.”

Like many home inspectors across the country, Valley isn’t seeing too much inspection work related to home sales these days. But he’s glad that a couple of years ago he bought a thermal camera, took certification courses, and added thermal imaging to his energy-audit service. Now he takes the thermal camera everywhere, including regular home inspections.

“Sometimes people think I can actually see through the wall with this camera,” Valley says. “I can’t, of course, but the temperature differential does reveal what’s going on behind the wall.”

Looking at his camera screen inside Kaisernan’s home, Valley points at dark vertical lines set against an orange (warm) wall. The lines represent wooden studs and darker spots show where the nails are. Darker black areas between the studs show where the fiberglass insulation is sagging, bagging, or missing.

Kaiserman is particularly suspicious of her kitchen wall.

“What about the cabinets?” she wonders. “They turn into a freezer in the winter. All the cups in there are ice cold.”

Sure enough, Valley finds the thermal traces of an air leak high up on the wall through an old vent that had not been plugged properly. Within an hour and a half, Valley has identified nearly every spot inside and outside the home where heat was escaping or cold was intruding.

As part of the service, Valley routinely takes dozens of thermal pictures of each area and regular digital images, too, to make it easier to identify the location of each problem. He then compiles the photos into a report, placing arrows to clearly designate problems. Then it’s a matter of prioritizing areas with the worst air and heat leakage.

In Kaiserman’s case, it’s around the fireplace, by the cupboards, and down in the basement crawl space.

Kaiserman plans to eliminate the worst problems either by blowing insulation into the void behind the wall, or, if necessary, removing part of the wall and putting in fiberglass insulation. The termite damage near her chimney will have to wait until spring, she says.

“I’m really glad I did this,” says Kaiserman, who moved into the house a couple of years ago. “I knew I had some drafts, but I just didn’t know where they were coming from or how to get at them. Now I do.”

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Comments

1. Jesse Teshara | 11.12.08

If it’s cost-effective, maybe utility companies should provide this service, to help society by reducing energy consumption. Maybe there should be more of these inspectors, inspecting every home. While they’re at it, they can recommend more energy-saving appliances and practices, give links to websites with comprehensive lists of suggestions, and give a custom assessment of household optimization, like planting shade trees, etc.

2. Mara Sand | 11.12.08

Going around the walls with a candle will also help. The little flame will move in the direction of the air flow - and you will know there is a draft. Just be careful with that candle !

3. Paul Sprague | 11.12.08

Use a candle when it’s windy outside for a more pronounced effect.

4. Robert M. | 11.12.08

Some utility companies do provide energy inspections with an infrared camera. But, I think local governments could invest in the equipment to help improve housing in their communities and also to identify deteriorating rental properties. Law enforcement agencies can use them to identify illegal activities like indoor drug cultivation. (The large amount of current used for growing lights causes a home’s electrical supply line and line transformer to glow more brightly.)

Conservation has much better returns on the money invested than even alternative energy. But, try and get our politicians to listen to reason.

5. Ben Smith | 11.13.08

Strange all the posts above link back to Nahci.

6. John McKenna | 11.13.08

I have noticed in our IR classes that my students are really interested in energy audits. Many say the demand is growing rapidly.

7. Spencer | 11.14.08

Quick tip: Purchase inexpensive outlet / wall switch insulators to place behind coverplates. Older homes have real issue when contractors didn’t have access to today’s insulating foam.

8. David Valley | 11.17.08

Hello Everyone,

I’m glad to see the interest in Thermal (Infrared) Imaging. I’m attempting to get the word out that Infrared cameras can and will locate those areas of your home that are stealing your hard earned energy dollars. It’s a quick, effective tool in pinpointing those inefficient walls, floors and ceilings. A candle will not tell you how much insulation is in a wall cavity, but utilizing my IR camera will allow you to actually see what’s going on between those studs and rafters.

Please go to my website and you will find all the information you need regarding Infrared (Thermal) Imaging.

9. Linas Dapkus | 12.09.08

Good article. David Valley knows his stuff and is a well respected member of NACHI.

10. Dante DeCapri | 12.11.08

This statement is 100% incorrect-”a thermal audit can not only discover where energy is wasted, but also pinpoint mold as well as termite or water damage behind walls.” Infra-red alone CAN NOT discern mold or water damage; it can only see thermal differences that can be interpreted and further investigated by an experienced operator with a strong knowledge of construction techniques.

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