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Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition
Green Building Bible, fourth edition (both books)
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  1.  
    New-build recently completed. Fully plastered (skim on pl'bd). Now occupied but quite 'moist', still (humidity figures N/K). Householders noticed condensation on frame of (2G) alu sliding door/windows with thermal break. Stated Ug around 1.2.

    They write:

    '' internal air temp 22 deg C, GF lounge 2 pane slider, cill internal – 14.5 deg at same time as cill external was 10.4 deg C. The vertical in the middle of the window on the inside slider (ie no direct contact with the outside world except for its interlock with its outside mate) was 15.5 deg c midway up ie 1.5m above floor level, this gets warmer the higher one measures it.''

    I am sure the (probably) high humidity has something to do with it, but the differential between room temp and window frame surface temp seems quite big.

    Anyone got any experience of room/wall temp vs frame temp differentials for modern alu windows?

    End of main Q

    (Background comparison data):

    By comparison, in my living room this afternoon:

    Room temp is between 19 and 20, depending on which bit of the room you’re measuring.

    Frame temp of timber-framed 3G Green Bldg Store windows: 17.9

    Ext temp: 3.4

    (All degrees C, of course)

    My dining room, for contrast:

    Room temp 11.9 (Brrrrrrrrrrr…….)

    Frame temp of 30-year-old, definitely not thermal-break-equipped alu patio doors: 7.2

    Frame temp of 30-year-old timber windows: 10.2

    Ext temp: 3.4

    Any thoughts gratefully received.
    • CommentAuthorSimon Still
    • CommentTimeJan 21st 2016 edited
     
    For the room I'm in

    External Wall 19.1 (200ish mm insulation/25mm service cavity/Fermacell)
    Centre pane (3G) 18C
    Frame (GRP X-frame) 15C (lowest reading)
    Room Temp 20.7C
    External temp 5C

    (All measured with a very cheap IR thermometer)
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeJan 21st 2016
     
    Even at Ug1.2, which ain't bad, the glass performance will be compensating highly for the Al's poor performance.

    The super-value 3G windows I usually use, claim Uw1.1, but I bet their 3G glass isn't as high performance as your 2G glass - it needn't be because their solid (non thermal break) wood frames will be insulating better than your thermal-break Al.

    So even with thermal break, it's prob right that your Al frames are relatively cold.
  2.  
    Thanks, both!

    I have trawled back through old e-mails, and note that the window supplier said:

    ''The standard centre pane u-value for our sliding units is around 1.1 W/m2k, dependant on the amount of frame buried within the fabric of the building this equates to generally an overall u-value of around 1.5-1.6 W/m2k on sliding units and around 1.3-1.4 W/m2k on fixed panels, again dependant on glass make up and the size of the units''
    • CommentAuthorDarylP
    • CommentTimeJan 21st 2016
     
    ... ha ha .. I doubt that they achieve that when installed. :wink:
    I had a complaint from a client years back; newly plastered refurb, alu-framed windows (c/w thermal break) but fitted with MVHR.
    So much condensation running down the frames, it was staining and damaging the lovely oak window boards.
    The temp differential across these frames was minimal despite the thermal-break, forming massive cold-bridges.

    Good luck :smile:
    • CommentAuthorgravelld
    • CommentTimeJan 21st 2016
     
    Posted By: fostertom
    The super-value 3G windows I usually use, claim Uw1.1, but I bet their 3G glass isn't as high performance as your 2G glass - it needn't be because their solid (non thermal break) wood frames will be insulating better than your thermal-break Al..
    Huh? Really? Is this down to the depth of the insulant?
    • CommentAuthorcjard
    • CommentTimeJan 22nd 2016 edited
     
    Have you seen how the thermal break is achieved? It's a couple of strips of plastic embedded in grooves that hold together two alu extrusions. It's not as though the frame is a kingspan sandwich, or filled with any foam etc

    I wouldn't have expected a lot of condensation on a surface that was 15 degrees.. RH must be quite high?

    Just watch, it'll turn out that:
    22 was the temp they'd set on the thermostat, the air wasn't there yet
    They'd been drying washing all day on an adjacent rad, just made 3 cups of tea and were actively steaming some veg at the time the measure was done
    They'd had them open for 10 mins immediately before
    Their MVHR commissioning skipped a vent/is wonky/isn't done/unit doesn't exist and windows incorrectly have no trickle vents

    Etc


    Not that I expect alu windows to be great in any regard but the plastic strips should at least mean that the frame isn't hugely worse than the glazing. I do often think though that there should be some PIR in a frame somewhere, plenty of places to sneak it in, including a thin layer of it under a powder coated alu veneer that forms the aesthetic face of the profile. Such is the price we pay for wanting massive sliding expanses of glass that "connect the inside and outside spaces in a seamless torrent of archi-jargonal bullshit"

    They didn't take a huge numbe of measurements, would have been nice to know the internal and external spot data for several point s on the frame. Your window frames in your house dropped nearly 50 percent of the temp, theirs dropped a third

    I'd install some curtains (I'm going to.. My house has 6 sets of bi folding doors between 3 and 4 metres wide. I'm not so precious about looks that I'm prepared to have all my heat fly out of some fancy glazing), try and get the temp gradient to fall to dew point across them instead, at least they'll absorb it and release the next day.. But do check for a discrepancy between moisture generation by human activity plus fabric versus ventilation effectiveness?
    • CommentAuthorcjard
    • CommentTimeJan 22nd 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: fostertom I bet their 3G glass isn't as high performance as your 2G glass


    Is this sentence free from typos?
    • CommentAuthorgravelld
    • CommentTimeJan 22nd 2016
     
    Posted By: cjardHave you seen how the thermal break is achieved? It's a couple of strips of plastic embedded in grooves that hold together two alu extrusions. It's not as though the frame is a kingspan sandwich, or filled with any foam etc
    Oh right, that explains it. A sandwich is exactly what I was expecting.
  3.  
    Are all Ali frames created equal? The thermally broken frames made by a friends father 25 years ago did just have a small plastic join between two profiles.

    Our aluminium front door has a much larger break and insulation in the cavity
    http://www.rkdoorsystems.co.uk/technical.html
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeJan 22nd 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: cjardIs this sentence free from typos?
    Yes - it's possible, but the 2G's extra measures like super-coatings may make it expensive compared to an easier 3G solution.
    •  
      CommentAuthorfostertom
    • CommentTimeJan 22nd 2016
     
    The likes of Vitrocsa have far better Al frame performance - at a price!
  4.  
    cjard: ''Have you seen how the thermal break is achieved? It's a couple of strips of plastic embedded in grooves that hold together two alu extrusions. It's not as though the frame is a kingspan sandwich, or filled with any foam etc''

    I haven't actually seen a sample of the frame and extrusion in this case, but I have been sent the spec for the (fibre-reinforced polyamide) extrusion, and it seems to be as you suggest. A hollow, foam-filled section wold be nice, but you still need the 'break', and then effectively you are into semi-structural insulation.

    I suspect that the frame and house generally was probably colder and more moist when the condensation was present, but that info must have been imparted in a phone-call, as I cannot find an e-mail ref to the condensation.
    • CommentAuthorcjard
    • CommentTimeJan 22nd 2016 edited
     
    Posted By: Simon StillAre all Ali frames created equal? The thermally broken frames made by a friends father 25 years ago did just have a small plastic join between two profiles.

    Our aluminium front door has a much larger break and insulation in the cavity
    http://www.rkdoorsystems.co.uk/technical.html" rel="nofollow" >http://www.rkdoorsystems.co.uk/technical.html


    Definitely not created equal, but ultimately you probably get to the point that it doesn't make a huge difference to insulate such a small space because it's not like an effective convection current will set up.. In the same fashion that double glazing works well mostly because you trapped a 16mm-ish layer of air (or some noble gas for a slight percentage improvmeant) that doesn't convect, the frame could be considered to be some simple extension of the double glazed concept

    Perhaps I'm being unfair and premature..I haven't hacked any of my frames to bits, I've just looked at the profile cad drawings as a side interest. Maybe smarts alu profiles are full of kingspan.. I can imagine it making them a bigger to weld though. Maybe they're crimped, or maybe it varies. I know that my her ally broken roof lights have no insulation in at all, and I've pondered pouring some 2 part in.. Got rather a lot of other stuff on for such tinkering though :)
    • CommentAuthorthe souter
    • CommentTimeJan 27th 2016
     
    Seems odd to use aluminium (apart from it's poor enviro cred.) for windows unless well broken, due to it's conductive properties. Power sanding some aluminium trim today and with regular dousing in a mugful of water, had a nice hot cuppa in a few minutes...
    Simon, how are you getting on with your GRP windows? Think you had some teething trouble- paint scratches, etc? Your frame temps. are very impressive but understandably low, given that pultruded GRP is used as the thermal break material by alu and timber frame manufacturers.
  5.  
    <blockquote><cite>Posted By: the souter</cite>Seems odd to use aluminium (apart from it's poor enviro cred.) for windows unless well broken, due to it's conductive properties. ....


    Simon, how are you getting on with your GRP windows? Think you had some teething trouble- paint scratches, etc? Your frame temps. are very impressive but understandably low, given that pultruded GRP is used as the thermal break material by alu and timber frame manufacturers.</blockquote>

    But aluminium is light, cheap, strong, stable and doesn't rot or corrode in most conditions. The conductivity is the big issue.

    We only moved in in November so it's too early for me to give any long term view. The window company sent a repair guy to respray the windows that had been damaged in transit (not sure it's any more of a problem than wood or alu).

    There are some design elements to the X-frame that don't seem well thought through - fixed involve drilling and screwing in visible locations on some frames.

    It's a few years since we originally specified ours now and GRP doesn't seem to be making any further inroads - Velfac seem to have dropped their Helo range.
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