What should I check when flex duct is sagging and starving a room?
1st YearFlex DuctGREEN · Standard Correction
Sagging flex can choke the liner before the air ever reaches the diffuser. Re-support the run so the duct is smooth, not crushed, not kinked, and not stretched into a bad bend.
Flex duct is forgiving, but it is easy to install ugly. Severe sag, sharp bends, crushed straps, or extra-long runs can collapse the inner liner and starve the room even when the diffuser looks connected.
The normal correction is to re-hang and clean up the route: support it per the project/manufacturer direction, pull out unnecessary slack, keep bends wide, and make sure straps support without crushing the duct.
Field checklist
Look for sags, kinks, crushed straps, torn jacket, or inner liner pulled loose at either end.
Check that the flex is not longer than needed and is not snaked around obstacles for no reason.
Make sure bends are wide and smooth instead of hard folded.
Verify the inner liner is attached and sealed at the collar, not just the outer jacket.
Check project/manufacturer support and bend requirements before calling it corrected.
Ask Foreman
The flex run to [room/diffuser] is sagging and the liner looks restricted. I can re-support it, shorten the ugly slack, and clean up the bend path per the approved method. Do you want that corrected before ceiling close?
Use this as training guidance. The foreman, approved drawings, project specs, manufacturer installation instructions, employer safety policy, and AHJ/code requirements always control the final answer.