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BPI Written Exam - Section 1 Building Science Fundamentals13. Understand and Convert Pressure Units: Inches of Water Column (IWC), Pascal (Pa)
This is an important unit of measurement during your energy audits for:
1 Pascal (Pa) is a unit of pressure and equal to about the weight of one post-it-note laying on your hand. A common mistake is thinking that pressure is a flow rate and you can measure airflow with the same tools... that is wrong my friend but you are close. To get a flow rate from a pressure reading simply multiply your pressure reading by the area your flow is coming from (i.e. the duct area). A Pascal is measured by energy auditors with a manometer. Inches of water column is a term more familiar to the HVAC folks. It is also expressed as inH2O. It is also a unit of pressure, just as a Pa is or PSI, they are all the same thing. The definition of an IWC is a unit of pressure measurement required to lift a column of water.
Converting Pa to IWC1 IWC = 248 Pa OR 1 Pa = 1/248.84 IWC
Convert 100 IWC to Pa. Answer: so if you want to know how many IWC 50 Pa is, divide: 100 / 248.84 = 0.402 Pa (a very small number) or 0.004 x Pa = IWC Convert 113 Pa to IWC Answer: so if you measure a static pressure of 113 Pa on the return side, convert it to IWC by multiplying: 0.004 x 113 = 0.452 IWC (more common conversion than IWC to Pa) Next Section
1b. Principals of energy, air & moisture
1c. Combustion science
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The main topics of the BPI BA exam are listed out below. Click on a link that interests you, or you need some brushing up on to learn more on each subject.
1. Building Science Fundamentals 1a. Basic terms and definitions 1b. Principals of energy, air & moisture 1c. Combustion science 2. Buildings and Their Systems 2a. Building components 2b. Conservation strategies 2c. Comprehensive building assessment process 2d. Design considerations 3. Measurement and Verification of Building Performance 3a. Applied diagnostics and troubleshooting 4. BPI National Standards and Project Specifications 4a. Comprehensive building assessment 5. Analyzing Buildings Systems 5a. Comprehensive building assessment 5b. Appliances and lighting 6. Conduct and communications 6a. Conservation strategies |