Zone Pressure Diagnostics ZPD with Bill Eckman of NME$A

Room Pressures

Watch a webinar about Zone Pressure Diagnostics, or ZPDs. This video discusses:

  • Benefits and limitations of Zonal Pressure Diagnostics(ZPD)
  • Best practices for accurate results
  • Reference tube locations for testing
  • Common mistakes and solutions
  • Interpreting the results

Watch related past videos about Zone Pressure Diagnostics orĀ sign up for live webinars.

Benefits of ZPD

ZPD is primarily used to evaluate air barrier effectiveness between different zones within a building, such as:

  • Attics and living spaces

  • Crawlspaces and basements

  • Garages and main dwelling units

  • Adjoining apartments or rooms

Key advantages include:

  • Helps identify leakage paths that standard blower door tests may miss

  • Reveals pressure imbalances between connected spaces

  • Guides effective air sealing and retrofit efforts

ZPD is especially valuable in multifamily, retrofit, or diagnostic scenarios where visual inspection is limited.

Limitations of ZPD

While ZPD offers useful insights, it has constraints:

  • Assumes steady-state conditions – Uncontrolled airflow or HVAC operation can skew results

  • Requires blower door testing as a prerequisite

  • Does not quantify leakage—only provides pressure relationships

  • Sensitive to tube placement and building dynamics (wind, stack effect)

It’s best used as a supplement to other tests, not a standalone measurement of leakage.

Best Practices for Accurate ZPD Results

  • Set up a blower door to pressurize or depressurize the building to a standard reference pressure (typically 50 Pa).

  • Use reference tubing connected to a digital gauge (e.g., DM32) to measure pressure in adjacent zones.

  • Isolate zones when possible by closing interior doors or sealing openings.

  • Ensure consistent environmental conditions (no wind, HVAC off).

  • Always zero your gauge before taking pressure readings.

Reference Tube Locations

Where you place your tubing directly affects the reliability of your data. Suggested locations include:

  • Attic hatches or vents

  • Crawlspace or basement doors

  • Behind dropped ceilings

  • Garage/laundry doors

  • Party walls or stairwells

Use caution when fishing tubing through small gaps or mechanical chases, as this could introduce localized pressure errors.

Common Mistakes & Solutions

MistakeSolution
Placing tubes too close to fans or leaksPosition tubes away from airflow sources
Not allowing pressures to stabilizeWait for steady readings before recording
Leaving interzonal doors openClose doors and note all boundary conditions
Misinterpreting ΔP readingsRefer to known target values and context

Interpreting the Results

The goal of ZPD is to understand how well each zone is connected—or separated—from the primary conditioned space.

  • A Ī”P of 50 Pa (same as test pressure) = well-separated, well-sealed zone

  • A Ī”P near 0 Pa = highly connected zone (leaky or unsealed)

  • Intermediate values suggest partial connectivity and potential leakage paths

Use the results to prioritize air sealing, evaluate retrofit work, or verify new construction air barriers.

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