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Category 18 · starter routes

🌬️ Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

CHECK FIRST Check details before proceeding. Jobsite rule: plans, specs, foreman direction, manufacturer instructions, code, and AHJ win.

Install choices that affect airflow: restrictions, static, dampers, leakage, fittings, flex, and TAB access.

Audit shortcut

Airflow / TAB Fast Paths

Startup and TAB problems apprentices search by symptom, not by install category.

Pre-TAB Walk Checklist

Open the walk-before-balance checklist before TAB starts.

Open

System short on CFM

Walk the system from AHU to diffuser instead of guessing.

Open

TAB found zero airflow

Symptom-language route for no air at a diffuser.

Open

Submit a real TAB problem

If your exact startup problem is missing, document it safely for review.

Submit
Jobsite rule

Use this as a route, not a substitute for supervision.

Plans, specs, code, manufacturer instructions, approved submittals, and foreman direction always win.

Loaded answer bank

Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

Search inside this category, filter by apprentice year or severity, then open an answer for quick answer, field steps, ask-foreman rule, and do-not-do warning.

Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY1st Year#426High
What do I do when flex kink reduces airflow?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Straighten and support the flex before TAB turns it into an airflow complaint. A kink or crushed inner liner shrinks the air path, so the diffuser may look connected but still starves for air.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Follow the flex from collar to boot/diffuser and find the kink or flattened spot.
  • Check whether the inner liner is collapsed, twisted, stretched too tight, or sagging.
  • Shorten the run or reroute it if the flex is acting like a long sloppy hose.
  • Add approved support/cradle without cinching the liner.
  • Ask for hard duct or a route change if the flex cannot hold a smooth bend.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This flex is kinked at [location] and may be choking the diffuser. Do you want me to re-support/shorten it, or change the route/hard duct it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not hide kinked, crushed, sagging, or extra-long flex above ceiling because it “looks connected.”

Why this matters

Airflow needs open cross-section. A collapsed flex liner increases resistance and can leave the diffuser short on CFM even when the duct is physically connected.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE2nd Year#427Medium
What do I do when too many sharp elbows increase pressure loss?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Too many hard turns add pressure loss. Count the elbows/offsets in the run and ask before adding another turn that could make TAB fight the system.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Trace the run from main/VAV to device and count tight elbows or hard offsets.
  • Look for a straighter route before adding another fitting.
  • Check whether each elbow was shown on the shop drawing or added in the field.
  • Measure available clearance for a longer radius or cleaner offset.
  • Ask before installing a shortcut route that adds unnecessary turns.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This route needs [number] elbows/turns to fit. Do you want this routing, or should we get a cleaner path before I install it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not stack elbows just because the duct can be forced through the space.

Why this matters

Each sharp turn steals pressure. The air may still move, but the fan and TAB tech have less room to make the design work.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE3rd Year#428Medium
What do I do when abrupt transition creates turbulence?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

An abrupt transition can create turbulence, noise, and pressure loss. Verify the transition length/taper before locking it in.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Compare the transition to the shop drawing or fitting detail.
  • Check whether the size change is sudden instead of gradual.
  • Look for noise-prone locations near VAVs, diffusers, fans, or elbows.
  • Confirm the transition does not block access, dampers, or test ports.
  • Ask before field-cutting or substituting a shorter transition.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This transition changes from [size] to [size] over [length]. Is this transition acceptable, or do you want a longer/approved fitting?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not make a short chopped transition because it is easier to fit.

Why this matters

Air does not like sudden shape changes. Abrupt transitions can cause turbulence, noise, and lower delivered air.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY1st Year#429High
What do I do when duct size installed smaller than print?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Stop before covering or continuing. Wrong-size duct can change airflow, connections, insulation clearance, and inspection results.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Read the duct size exactly from the latest print/shop drawing.
  • Measure the installed/staged duct width × height.
  • Check whether the size changes at a transition or branch.
  • Mark the location and take a photo of duct next to drawing callout.
  • Ask before installing more or trying to “make it work.”

🗣️ Ask the foreman

The print shows [size], but this installed/staged duct is [size] at [location]. Do you want this held before we continue?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not keep hanging the wrong size duct because the pieces are already staged.

Why this matters

A duct can fit physically and still be wrong. Size affects airflow, pressure, connections, and whether downstream pieces line up.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY1st Year#430High
What do I do when supply/return/exhaust mixed up?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Confirm the system tag before tying in. Supply, return, exhaust, and outside air ducts are not interchangeable.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Find the tag on the drawing: SA, RA, EA, OA, MUA, or other system label.
  • Trace the duct back to equipment, shaft, fan, VAV, or grille.
  • Check airflow arrows and room served.
  • Compare duct label/tag to the field piece or shop drawing.
  • Ask before tying different systems together.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This run/tag is unclear at [location]. Is this supply, return, exhaust, outside air, or make-up air before I connect it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not connect duct because it is nearby or the same size.

Why this matters

Mixed systems can cause comfort, pressure, contamination, odor, and inspection problems.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#431High
What do I do when balancing damper installed inaccessible?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Do not bury a balancing damper. TAB must be able to reach it after ceiling and finish work.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Locate the damper handle or actuator.
  • Check the ceiling type and whether an access panel is planned.
  • Verify the handle can be reached with ceiling/grid installed.
  • Photo the damper and the ceiling/soffit condition.
  • Ask before closing or insulating if access will be lost.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This balancing damper at [location] will not be reachable after ceiling/finish. Do you want an access panel or a different damper location?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not cover a damper handle that TAB or service needs.

Why this matters

If TAB cannot reach the damper, the system cannot be balanced without rework.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#432High
What do I do when branch takeoff facing wrong direction?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Verify branch direction before sealing. A takeoff facing the wrong way can starve the branch or create noise/turbulence.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Confirm airflow direction in the main duct.
  • Check the takeoff orientation against the shop drawing/detail.
  • Verify the branch serves the correct diffuser/room.
  • Look for damper position and access before sealing.
  • Ask before rotating/cutting/moving the takeoff.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This branch takeoff appears to face [direction] on a [airflow direction] main. Do you want this orientation verified before I seal it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not assume any branch direction works as long as it connects.

Why this matters

Branch orientation changes how air enters the branch and can affect noise, CFM, and balancing.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE1st Year#433Medium
What do I do when diffuser boot not sealed or aligned?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Make sure the diffuser boot is sealed, aligned, and connected to the right device before ceiling close.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Match the boot to the diffuser/grille size and room tag.
  • Check that the boot is square with the ceiling/device layout.
  • Verify flex or branch connection is sealed at the collar.
  • Look for insulation or ceiling conflicts around the boot.
  • Ask before covering if boot/device alignment is off.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This boot at [room/grid] is not lining up/sealed right. Do you want me to adjust it before ceiling closes?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not leave a boot half-sealed or aimed wrong because the tile hides it.

Why this matters

The diffuser can only deliver what the boot and branch provide. A bad boot connection becomes a TAB or ceiling punch item.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#434High
What do I do when return duct leaks pulling ceiling/plenum air?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Return leaks can pull ceiling/plenum air instead of designed room air. Seal the return path per the approved method before startup.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Identify whether the duct is return, relief, exhaust, or transfer.
  • Check open seams, gaps, access panels, and unsealed joints.
  • Verify whether the return is ducted or intentionally uses plenum return.
  • Seal only with approved material/method for that system.
  • Ask before assuming a ceiling space leak is acceptable.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This return duct has leakage/open gaps at [location]. Is this supposed to be sealed ducted return, or is this area intentionally plenum return?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not leave return leaks because “it is only return.”

Why this matters

Return leaks can pull dust, heat, odors, or ceiling air and can change system balance.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#435High
What do I do when duct run crushed by hanger/other trade?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A crushed duct section is an airflow restriction, not just a cosmetic dent. Stop and verify repair/replacement before startup or cover.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Find what crushed the duct: hanger, pipe, cable tray, storage, lift, or other trade.
  • Check whether the duct shape or opening area is reduced.
  • Photo the damage with location/grid and reference.
  • Check if seams, liner, insulation, or supports were affected.
  • Ask whether to repair, replace, or escalate before covering.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This duct is crushed/dented at [location] and may restrict airflow. Do you want repair, replacement, or a coordination fix before TAB?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not cover crushed duct because air “can still get through.”

Why this matters

Restriction increases pressure loss and can create noise, low CFM, or failed TAB.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE2nd Year#436Medium
What do I do when long flex run instead of rigid duct?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Long flex is usually a shortcut that turns into airflow loss. Verify whether hard duct or a shorter route is required.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Measure the actual flex length, not the straight-line distance.
  • Check for sag, extra loops, hard bends, and support spacing.
  • Compare the route to the drawing/shop detail.
  • Ask whether hard duct should replace part of the flex run.
  • Correct the route before ceiling close.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This flex route is about [length] with [bends/sag]. Do you want hard duct or a shorter route before I finish it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not use extra flex to solve every layout problem.

Why this matters

Long sloppy flex adds resistance and makes TAB harder even when it is connected correctly.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY1st Year#437High
What do I do when excessive sag creates friction?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Sagging flex creates friction and can collapse the liner. Support it cleanly before it becomes a hidden airflow complaint.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Look for low bellies between supports.
  • Check whether the sag is also creating a kink at the boot/collar.
  • Add approved supports with enough width to avoid pinching.
  • Keep the run smooth and direct.
  • Ask if the run should be shortened or changed to hard duct.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This flex has a low sag between supports at [location]. Do you want another support or a shorter route before cover?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not leave a belly of flex above ceiling and hope TAB can balance it out.

Why this matters

A sagging flex run makes the air path longer and rougher, which can lower diffuser airflow.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE3rd Year#438Medium
What do I do when offset built too tight causing pressure drop?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A tight offset may fit in the ceiling but still hurt performance. Check offset angle, length, and the O.W.L. before fabricating or installing.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Measure obstruction, offset, and available length.
  • Use O.W.L.: Offset × fitting multiplier = Length needed.
  • Check whether the offset creates a hard turn right before a branch, VAV, or diffuser.
  • Compare against the approved routing/detail.
  • Ask before forcing a tight offset into a short space.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This offset is [offset] over [available length]. Does this layout give us enough length, or do you want a different route/fitting?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not build a short aggressive offset just because it clears the obstruction.

Why this matters

A tight offset can solve clearance while creating pressure loss and noise. O.W.L. keeps the layout honest before cutting metal.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info / O.W.L. offset calculator
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE3rd Year#439Medium
What do I do when internal liner loose causing obstruction?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Loose internal liner is a hidden airflow blockage. Stop before sealing/covering and get direction on repair or replacement.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Look inside the duct/opening if safely visible.
  • Check whether liner is loose, folded, torn, or blocking the air path.
  • Verify whether liner repair/replacement is allowed by project spec.
  • Photo the condition before it gets covered.
  • Ask before taping, gluing, or trimming liner in the field.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

The internal liner looks loose/blocking the duct at [location]. Do you want this repaired, replaced, or inspected before we close it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not shove loose liner back and cover it without approval.

Why this matters

Loose liner can reduce airflow, shed material, create noise, and fail inspection.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#440High
What do I do when damper left closed or not checked?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Before blaming the unit, check damper position. A closed or unknown damper can make a diffuser look dead during TAB.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Locate the volume/fire/smoke/control damper tied to the affected branch.
  • Confirm whether it should be open, closed, locked, or controlled.
  • Verify handle/actuator position is reachable and visible.
  • Do not reset fire/smoke dampers without direction.
  • Tell foreman/TAB what you found before changing anything.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

The damper serving [room/device] appears [closed/unknown]. Are we allowed to open/adjust this, or does it need foreman/TAB/fire-damper verification?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not randomly open, close, or reset dampers without knowing what type they are and who controls them.

Why this matters

A simple closed damper can look like a failed unit, but rated/control dampers may have specific reset/inspection rules.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE2nd Year#441Medium
What do I do when low airflow blamed on unit before install checked?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Check the install before blaming equipment. Low airflow often comes from a blocked branch, kinked flex, closed damper, wrong device, or leakage.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Start at the problem diffuser/device and trace back toward the main/VAV.
  • Check flex, boot, collar, branch, damper, device tag, and seal.
  • Compare to nearby similar rooms if available.
  • Document the first restriction or mismatch you find.
  • Ask before claiming the AHU/VAV is the problem.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

Before we blame the unit, can I verify the branch/flex/damper/device serving [room] and show you what I find?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not tell TAB or the engineer it is “the unit” before checking your install.

Why this matters

Most field fixes are cheaper before the blame moves upstream. Find the install problem first.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE3rd Year#442Medium
What do I do when tap too close to elbow/fitting?
Tap to open
🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A tap too close to an elbow can make the branch noisy or short on air. Measure the tap location and ask before cutting a new hole or leaving it.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Measure from elbow/fitting face to takeoff centerline.
  • Check if the takeoff is in turbulent air right after a turn.
  • Look for whistle/noise, low CFM, or balancing problem at served diffuser.
  • Photo the tap location with tape visible.
  • Ask whether to relocate the tap, add turning/transition detail, or hold for direction.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This takeoff is about [distance] from the elbow/fitting and the diffuser is noisy/short. Do you want the tap relocated or reviewed before we close it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not keep adding mastic or adjusting the diffuser to hide a bad takeoff location.

Why this matters

Air is unstable right after a hard turn. A nearby tap can pull turbulent air and create noise or poor CFM.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY1st Year#443High
What do I do when duct leakage before diffuser reduces delivered air?
Tap to open
🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A leak before the diffuser means the room never gets all the air. Seal the leak path before TAB treats it like a balancing problem.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Trace from branch/takeoff to diffuser boot.
  • Check collars, flex bands, boot seams, and visible duct joints.
  • Feel/listen for air leaks only where safe and accessible.
  • Mark/photo the leak location.
  • Seal or repair only with approved method/material.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

I found air leaking before the diffuser at [location]. Do you want this sealed/repaired before TAB continues?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not ignore branch leaks because the diffuser is close by.

Why this matters

Any air leaking above ceiling is air not delivered to the room.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE2nd Year#444Medium
What do I do when noise/whistle from poor joint or sharp transition?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Whistling usually means air is being forced through a restriction, sharp edge, bad joint, or poor transition. Find the source before swapping diffusers.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Listen for the exact location: diffuser, damper, collar, joint, transition, or takeoff.
  • Check for closed damper, sharp tap edge, loose gasket, bad collar fit, or tight transition.
  • Look for takeoff too close to elbow/fitting.
  • Document the noise location and condition.
  • Ask before cutting, relocating, or replacing parts.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

The whistle is coming from [device/joint/takeoff] at [location]. Do you want me to check damper/tap/transition before we blame the diffuser?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not just crank the damper closed or swap a diffuser without finding the restriction/noise source.

Why this matters

Noise is often a symptom of pressure and turbulence. Closing things blindly can make balance worse.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE2nd Year#445Medium
What do I do when grille/register location blocked by field condition?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A blocked grille/register location is a coordination problem, not a grille problem. Verify layout before cutting ceiling or forcing a device.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Compare grille/register location to RCP, mechanical drawing, and field obstruction.
  • Check lights, sprinkler, ceiling grid, access panels, framing, and architectural feature.
  • Verify which device serves the room.
  • Photo the conflict with grid/room reference.
  • Ask before relocating the device or cutting ceiling.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This grille/register location conflicts with [light/sprinkler/grid/framing] at [room]. Do you want this moved or coordinated before ceiling cut?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not cut a new location or force a grille into a blocked spot without direction.

Why this matters

Device location affects air throw, ceiling layout, access, and punch.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE3rd Year#446Medium
What do I do when not leaving test ports or TAB access where needed?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

TAB needs access points, damper handles, test ports, and readable labels. Plan access before insulation and ceiling hide it.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Identify dampers, VAVs, coils, test ports, and devices TAB must reach.
  • Check ceiling/hard-lid/access panel location.
  • Verify labels/tags are visible after finish.
  • Photo anything that will be hidden.
  • Ask for access panel or relocation before cover.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

TAB will need access to [damper/VAV/test port] at [location]. Do you want an access panel/label before ceiling closes?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not assume TAB can reach through a random ceiling tile later.

Why this matters

TAB cannot balance what it cannot find or reach.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#447High
What do I do when airflow arrow ignored on terminal unit/damper?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Airflow arrows on terminal units and dampers matter. Verify arrow direction before connecting and sealing.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Find the airflow arrow or inlet/outlet marking on the VAV/damper/unit.
  • Trace duct airflow direction from main to device.
  • Compare to submittal/shop drawing if available.
  • Check that access and actuator orientation still work.
  • Ask before sealing if arrow and duct direction do not agree.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

The airflow arrow on this [VAV/damper/unit] points [direction], but the duct route looks [direction]. Can you verify before I connect it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not connect a VAV/damper backward because the duct physically fits.

Why this matters

A backwards terminal/damper can fail startup, controls, TAB, and service access.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#448High
What do I do when return path blocked by framing/ceiling condition?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A blocked return path can create pressure and comfort complaints. Verify return/opening path before closing framing or ceiling.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Trace how air returns from room to return grille/duct/shaft/plenum.
  • Check if framing, ceiling, liner, insulation, or another trade blocks the path.
  • Confirm whether transfer path or undercut is required.
  • Photo the blockage and served room.
  • Ask before covering or accepting the blocked condition.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

The return path for [room/area] appears blocked by [condition]. Do you want this opened/coordinated before close-in?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not assume supply air will work if the return path is blocked.

Why this matters

Air supplied to a room has to get back out. Blocked return paths cause pressure, noise, doors slamming, and comfort problems.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#449High
What do I do when fitting installed backwards causing poor performance?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A backwards fitting can fit perfectly and still perform badly. Verify airflow direction and fitting orientation before sealing.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Identify fitting type and intended airflow direction.
  • Look for throat/heel, turning vanes, tap/scoop, or transition direction.
  • Compare to shop drawing or layout mark.
  • Check served branch/device before sealing.
  • Ask before flipping, cutting, or leaving it.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This fitting may be backwards at [location]. Can you verify airflow direction and fitting orientation before I seal it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not assume symmetrical-looking fittings work either way.

Why this matters

Some fittings are directional. Backwards orientation can create turbulence, pressure loss, or wrong branch performance.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#450High
What do I do when installer does not understand airflow consequences of shortcut?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A shortcut that saves five minutes can cost a TAB day. Check airflow consequences before accepting sloppy install.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Name the shortcut: extra flex, tight offset, wrong fitting, closed damper, bad seal, blocked access.
  • Ask whether it affects airflow, TAB, inspection, or service.
  • Correct simple install issues before ceiling/insulation hides them.
  • Document issues that need foreman/coordination approval.
  • Do not normalize shortcuts just because the duct is connected.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This shortcut at [location] might affect airflow/TAB. Do you want it corrected now or reviewed before we cover it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not treat “it fits” as the same as “it works.”

Why this matters

Airflow problems often start as small install shortcuts that nobody wanted to fix while the ceiling was open.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY1st Year#926High
What do I do when branch takeoff too close to fitting?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A takeoff too close to a fitting is a hidden performance problem. Verify location before cutting or sealing the branch.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Identify the nearby fitting: elbow, transition, offset, cap, or branch.
  • Measure distance from fitting to takeoff centerline.
  • Check branch direction and served device.
  • Photo the tap location with tape visible.
  • Ask if the takeoff needs to move before sealing/insulating.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This branch takeoff is close to [fitting] at [distance]. Do you want it moved or approved before I seal it?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not cut a takeoff wherever the metal is easiest to reach.

Why this matters

Branches placed in disturbed air can be noisy, short on CFM, or hard to balance.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE1st Year#927Medium
What do I do when flex restriction hidden above ceiling?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Hidden flex restrictions become hidden airflow complaints. Check the whole run before the ceiling closes.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Run your hand/eyes from boot to collar.
  • Look for kink, crushed liner, sag, tight strap, sharp bend, or excess length.
  • Correct support and bend shape before cover.
  • Photo the corrected run if asked.
  • Ask before closing if the route cannot be made smooth.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This flex restriction will be hidden after ceiling at [location]. Do you want it corrected before cover?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not leave hidden restrictions because nobody can see them from the floor.

Why this matters

Once ceiling closes, a simple flex fix becomes a callback or punch item.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE2nd Year#928Medium
What do I do when balancing damper left inaccessible?
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🛠️ CHECK / COORDINATE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

A left-inaccessible balancing damper is a future TAB failure. Verify access and labels now.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Locate the damper handle.
  • Check ceiling tile/hard-lid/access panel position.
  • Confirm TAB can reach and identify it.
  • Add label/flag if directed.
  • Ask before ceiling close or insulation if access is doubtful.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This balancing damper may be inaccessible after finish at [location]. Do you want access/labeling addressed now?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not tell yourself TAB will “figure it out later.”

Why this matters

TAB time is expensive and access problems are preventable before close-in.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY2nd Year#929High
What do I do when closed damper not checked before complaint?
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🚨 CRITICAL STOP / VERIFY Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Check closed dampers before escalating an airflow complaint. Know which dampers you are allowed to adjust.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Find the damper serving the complaint area.
  • Identify if it is volume, fire/smoke, motorized/control, or backdraft.
  • Verify position and access.
  • If it is fire/smoke or controls-related, stop and ask before touching.
  • Report the damper type/position to foreman/TAB.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

The damper serving [room] appears closed/unknown. Is this a volume damper I can open, or does it need foreman/TAB/fire-damper direction?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not reset or adjust unknown dampers just to make air show up.

Why this matters

Some dampers are simple balance dampers. Others are life-safety or controls devices with reset/inspection rules.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
Category 18🔵 FIELD REFERENCE3rd Year#930Low
What do I do when duct size reduced in field without approval?
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🔵 FIELD REFERENCE Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation

📖 Verified core answer

Field-reducing duct size is a design/approval issue. Stop and document before a “small change” becomes a system performance problem.

🛠️ Field verification checklist

  • Compare installed/reduced size to latest drawing/shop drawing.
  • Confirm if a transition/reduction was approved.
  • Measure where the reduction starts and what it serves.
  • Photo the condition and drawing callout.
  • Ask before cutting, reducing, or accepting the changed size.

🗣️ Ask the foreman

This duct was reduced from [size] to [size] in the field at [location]. Was this approved, or should we hold it for direction?

Route options

AMake the small field correction only if it is within your assignment and safe.
BHold the condition and document it if the fix affects access, TAB, layout, code, or another trade.
CBring the foreman/TAB/super into the decision before cover, startup, or rework.

🚫 Do not do this

Do not reduce duct size to fit a clash without approval.

Why this matters

Smaller duct can increase velocity/noise and reduce available airflow downstream.

Verification basis

Project drawings/specs, TAB/startup needs, airflow path/system tags, damper/access requirements, approved details, foreman direction.Route: Airflow/TAB Impacts From Installation / Question-matched verified starter / Project-specific details still need approved info
Text to foreman
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