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It’s not a thing in real life either…
HVAC techs will use the anemometer that’s part of their standard kit, they aren’t going to tie a fire hazard that collects dust to a duct….
If you see them left behind, that’s because the company was too cheap to cleanup their garbage, they would ONLY be used while the techs were actively diagnosing a persistent issue, but it should be removed when done.
Why do people perpetuate obvious fake Hollywood stuff? Do you think code will allow you to permanently affix something flammable to a duct that would be heated and can catch it on fire…..?
then
That pretty much says it IS a thing in real life. It may not be supposed to be there, but it does appear in real life.
... how hot do you think the air coming out of a duct is? Also, this isn't a discussion about what codes allow, this is about what happens in practice.
I've personally seen them placed by people who were having issues with building management messing up the hvac schedule, and I'm sure there are other cases where they would be used. You're extrapolating your one use case to everything else.
All I said was, there's a real life basis for the trope. And there is, even you've admitted to it. So I'm not sure what your big argument is about...
Its hot enough to catch wood on fire… thats why metal ducts have very specific code clearances to combustible's… yikes… yeah thats the education level on this topic here…? The duct gets a lot hotter than the air coming out of it… try touching an operating one sometime…
Your ducts are emitting 250 C hot air? Because that's the ignition temp of wood. Should have told us you were working at camp Dante. The actual reason combustibles are supposed to be kept away from air ducts are because, in case of an actual fire, it prevents the fire from spreading via superheated air in the ducts. There is no way it happens during normal operation.
Now you've gone and broken the laws of physics. The duct would be exactly the same temp as the air coming out of it, or significantly lower if insulated on the inside. The only reason it seems hotter is because it has higher thermal conductivity.
Oh, the irony
thanks because his comment about catching fire is one of those things thats so ridiculous. Those electric warming quilt tables and halogen lights are way more a fire hazard.
Kotatsu? Because they're actually quite safe.
exactly.
It's a way to tell if the air is flowing cause you can see the ribbons move with the air. Hollywood thinks it looks good and makes it easy to let the viewer know the air is flowing so they use it all the time.