Permanent Load Reduction Plan: Attic Load Hunt

Permanent Load Reduction Plan case study home with attic infiltration and duct leakage issues
Home used in Permanent Load Reduction Plan Case Study #2 where attic infiltration and duct leakage increased HVAC load.

In Permanent Load Reduction Plan Case Study #1, we revealed what I call the Hidden Comfort Thief — building defects quietly stealing HVAC performance.

But once you know the thief exists, the next step is the hunt.

This Permanent Load Reduction Plan Case Study #2 focuses on the investigation phase. Instead of assuming the HVAC system was the problem, we tracked where the load was actually coming from.

This type of investigation aligns with Home Performance diagnostics, where the house is treated as a system rather than focusing only on HVAC equipment.

The trail quickly led to the attic.

There we discovered two issues working together to increase system demand:

  • attic duct leakage
  • uncontrolled air infiltration

These hidden problems were forcing the HVAC system to work far harder than the design intended.


Key Findings From Permanent Load Reduction Plan Case Study #2

During the investigation phase of this Permanent Load Reduction Plan, two major sources of hidden load were identified.

Primary Load Drivers

  • attic duct leakage allowing conditioned air to escape into the attic
  • air infiltration pathways pulling outdoor air into the building
  • increased heating and cooling loads caused by the interaction of these two issues
  • reduced HVAC system effectiveness because conditioned air never reached the living space

These findings are common in Home Performance assessments, but the Permanent Load Reduction Plan approach translates these discoveries directly into measurable load reduction.


The Homeowner Complaint

Like many homes that eventually require a Permanent Load Reduction Plan, the homeowner reported classic comfort problems:

  • uneven room temperatures
  • HVAC system running longer than expected
  • difficulty maintaining temperature during extreme weather

These symptoms often lead homeowners to believe the HVAC system needs replacement.

However, Permanent Load Reduction investigations start with the building.


The Investigation: Hunting the Load

During the inspection, attention quickly shifted to the attic.

In both Home Performance investigations and Permanent Load Reduction Plan assessments, the attic is one of the most common locations where hidden loads originate.

This is where the duct system and building envelope intersect.

The inspection revealed two critical defects.

Attic Duct Leakage

Supply ducts were leaking conditioned air directly into the attic

Ducts in the  Attic in PLR Plan Case Study #2
Ducts in the Attic in PLR Plan Case Study #2

and crawlspace.

Ducts in Crawlspace PLR Plan Case Study # 2
Ducts in Crawlspace PLR Plan Case Study # 2

When this happens, the system is effectively heating or cooling the attic rather than the living space.

This reduces delivered airflow while increasing system load.

https://www.energy.gov/energysaver/minimizing-energy-losses-ducts

Air Infiltration Pathways

The building envelope also allowed outside air to enter through several attic bypasses, including:

  • attic top plates
  • wiring penetrations
  • plumbing penetrations
  • recessed lighting
  • attic access points

chrome-extension://efaidnbmnnnibpcajpcglclefindmkaj/https://www.energystar.gov/ia/home_improvement/home_sealing/AirSealingFS_2005.pdf

Together, these defects created a cycle where conditioned air escaped while outside air was continuously pulled into the home.


Load Reduction Results

The goal of a Permanent Load Reduction Plan is not simply identifying defects — it is quantifying how much load those defects create.

Initial blower door testing measured:

9,471 CFM50 (27 ACH50)

After modeling improvements including air sealing and duct leakage reduction:

Projected infiltration dropped to 5,953 CFM50


Heating Load Reduction

Before PLR Plan

AreaHeating Load
1st Floor + Basement92,354 BTUh
2nd Floor70,462 BTUh
Total162,816 BTUh

After PLR Plan

AreaHeating Load
1st Floor + Basement73,376 BTUh
2nd Floor46,006 BTUh
Total119,382 BTUh

Heating Load Reduction

162,816 BTUh → 119,382 BTUh

Total Reduction

43,434 BTUh

≈ 27% reduction in heating load

Permanent Load Reduction Plan heating load reduction comparison before and after
Permanent Load Reduction Plan Heating reduction Chart

Cooling Load Reduction

Before PLR Plan

AreaCooling Load
1st Floor + Basement38,365 BTUh
2nd Floor51,995 BTUh
Total90,360 BTUh

After PLR Plan

AreaCooling Load
1st Floor + Basement35,842 BTUh
2nd Floor33,770 BTUh
Total69,612 BTUh

Cooling Load Reduction

90,360 BTUh → 69,612 BTUh

Total Reduction

20,748 BTUh

≈ 23% reduction in cooling load

Permanent Load Reduction Plan cooling load reduction comparison before and after
Permanent Load Reduction Plan cooling load reduction comparison before and after

Where the Load Was Coming From

The Manual J load breakdown revealed the real drivers behind the system demand.

First Floor Heating Load Breakdown

SourceBTUh
Walls10,429
Windows6,402
Doors1,728
Ceiling6,010
Floors4,955
Air Infiltration50,208
Duct Losses12,621

Air infiltration alone accounted for over half of the heating load.

Permanent Load Reduction Plan heating load breakdown showing infiltration and duct losses
Permanent Load Reduction Plan heating load breakdown showing infiltration and duct losses

Second Floor Cooling Load Breakdown

SourceBTUh
Windows17,949
Walls2,443
Ceiling2,633
Floors5,785
Infiltration Sensible1,866
Infiltration Latent5,260
Duct Losses16,059

Duct losses created more than 16,000 BTUh of cooling load.

Permanent Load Reduction Plan cooling load breakdown showing duct losses and infiltration impact
Permanent Load Reduction Plan cooling load breakdown showing duct losses and infiltration impact

Why Permanent Load Reduction Should Come Before HVAC Replacement

One of the biggest mistakes in residential HVAC projects is replacing equipment before understanding the building load.

When infiltration and duct leakage increase system demand:

  • systems appear undersized
  • contractors install larger equipment
  • comfort problems continue

A Permanent Load Reduction Plan reverses that process.

Instead of sizing equipment to overcome building defects, the defects themselves are corrected.

This reduces the load placed on the HVAC system permanently.


Permanent Load Reduction Case Study Lesson

This case study reinforces a core principle:

Most HVAC problems are actually building problems.

In this home:

  • severe air infiltration drove heating demand
  • attic duct leakage drove cooling losses
  • correcting those issues reduced load by more than 40,000 BTUh

This is the goal of a Permanent Load Reduction Plan — reducing the loads that force HVAC systems to work harder than necessary.

Video Case Study

This video walks through Permanent Load Reduction Plan Case Study #2 and documents the investigation phase—what we call the hunt for attic load driver

What the Client Had to Say

What Project Collaborators Had To Say

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Homeowners

If your home struggles with comfort or high energy use, the problem may not be the HVAC system.

A Permanent Load Reduction Plan can identify hidden building defects and create a roadmap for fixing them.

We can also connect you with a Verified™ contractor trained in Permanent Load Reduction in your area.


Contractors

If you want to diagnose building-driven comfort problems and deliver real solutions instead of guessing, our PLR Verified™ training teaches the Permanent Load Reduction methodology.

Learn how to:

  • perform load-driven diagnostics

  • identify hidden building loads

  • verify performance improvements

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