So I've read a TON about ventilation, and learned a lot. It's an incredibly complex subject the deeper you dig! But I have this really silly question left I haven't seen answered anywhere.
What is the relationship between static pressure and the size of a duct? For example, say you have a cool tube, and the light takes up some of the area available for air to travel, correct? Obviously the fan is going to pull less CFM than without the obstruction there.
Now I'd imagine that half the area would equate to half the airflow. Now does that mean that if a duct is reduced from say 6 to 4 inches at any point, the airflow is basically cut in half, no matter how long the constriction is?
I've seen tables that show the static pressure per 100 feet of duct sizes, for example .65"wg for 4" duct, .2"wg for 6" duct, etc. So is that way to understand it, if you have a 6" duct with a light taking up the middle, is the static pressure simply increased in relationship to how long the light is?
What gets really confusing to me, is to imagine covering half of the intake side of a 6" duct. Makes me think there would be half the airflow coming out the exhaust side.
So say you want to hook a cool tube up to a 6" fan, and for the tube it's really only like the equivilant of a 4" duct the air can flow through (which is about half the space).
So now thinking about matching a fan to a filter, you see the issue. Say the fan max's out at 1"wg pressure, the filter is .7"wg already. Is reducing the size of a duct in half .3"wg?
Jeez I feel like I'm not making sense. But it seems like a really obvious question?
I guess to make it really simple. If I have a 6" fan, and hook up a 4" reducer to one side and run 4" duct, what is the static pressure increase?
Now I think it must be a function of how long the run is! So that would mean covering half the intake doesn't cut the flow at the exhaust in half? WTF....
What is the relationship between static pressure and the size of a duct? For example, say you have a cool tube, and the light takes up some of the area available for air to travel, correct? Obviously the fan is going to pull less CFM than without the obstruction there.
Now I'd imagine that half the area would equate to half the airflow. Now does that mean that if a duct is reduced from say 6 to 4 inches at any point, the airflow is basically cut in half, no matter how long the constriction is?
I've seen tables that show the static pressure per 100 feet of duct sizes, for example .65"wg for 4" duct, .2"wg for 6" duct, etc. So is that way to understand it, if you have a 6" duct with a light taking up the middle, is the static pressure simply increased in relationship to how long the light is?
What gets really confusing to me, is to imagine covering half of the intake side of a 6" duct. Makes me think there would be half the airflow coming out the exhaust side.
So say you want to hook a cool tube up to a 6" fan, and for the tube it's really only like the equivilant of a 4" duct the air can flow through (which is about half the space).
So now thinking about matching a fan to a filter, you see the issue. Say the fan max's out at 1"wg pressure, the filter is .7"wg already. Is reducing the size of a duct in half .3"wg?
Jeez I feel like I'm not making sense. But it seems like a really obvious question?
I guess to make it really simple. If I have a 6" fan, and hook up a 4" reducer to one side and run 4" duct, what is the static pressure increase?
Now I think it must be a function of how long the run is! So that would mean covering half the intake doesn't cut the flow at the exhaust in half? WTF....