Infrared - Where seeing is believing
Welcome to Thermal Image Scanning






Thermal imaging uses infrared technology to detect very small differences in temperature. Every material has a unique thermal signature and when moisture, heat, cold, or wood destroying insects are introduced into the structure the thermal signature changes. The changes can be subtle or dramatic but with this incredible thermal image scanning technology the thermal signatures are detectable where they wouldn't be able to be seen with the naked eye.

Thermography is the use of an infrared imaging and measurement camera to "see" and "measure" thermal energy emitted from an object. Thermal, or infrared energy is light that is not visible to the naked eye because its wavelength is too long. It's the part of the electromagnetic spectrum that we perceive as heat. Unlike visible light, in the infrared world everything with a temperature above absolute zero emits heat. Even very cold objects, like ice bergs, emit infrared.



What is Thermal Image Scanning?
Thermal Inspector
What Thermal Imaging is NOT
mouse over to see visual image 
missing insulation behind shower stall
THERMAL SURVEYS - By Patch Independent Home Inspections
Rick A. Harrington has completed advanace training and currently hold certifications as SIRI (Specialist--Infrared Residential Inspection) Advanced Certificate # 246ADV and a Thermography Level 1 Certificate # 246 from HomeSafe. HomeSafe trained inspectors provide the world's most advanced inspections.

Knowing what the information being viewed in the infrared camera is indicating more important than owning the camera.
Got Heat Loss . com
It's not a Moisture Meter or X-Ray Vision or Super Tool or a Risk Eliminateor.   It cannot detect moisture because the best it can do is detect thermal differences.   The infrared imaging camera can identify suspect areas that require further investigation by the inspector. Suspect areas can be checked by the inspector with a moisture meter to verify if the area contains elevated amounts of moisture.


Have me call you.
Thermal Image Scanning - Infrared Scans
Residential Scanning
Thermography, also known as thermal imaging, is a non-intrusive infrared or “heat” pictures from the surface of the subject material. Handheld or fix-mounted infrared cameras scan equipment or structures, then instantly convert the thermal images to pictures for monitoring or quantitative temperature analysis. By detecting anomalies often invisible to the naked eye, thermography allows corrective action before costly system failures occur.

Infrared thermography has evolved into one of the most valuable diagnostic tools for Predictive Maintenance and many other applications. It maximizes operations and safety in many industrial environments, but it also increases building efficiency. It is the most economical way to discover construction failures and to communicate them.

Rising energy costs

The cost of heating fuels and energy to run air conditioning have risen greatly in the past few years and focus has been on ways to reduce our energy consumption. . Legislation pushes the implementation of energy-saving construction technology, materials and appliances for both residential and commercial buildings.

In October, President Bush signed into law new consumer tax credits for energy efficiency home improvements. The Emergency Economic Stabilization Act of 2008 provides up to $500 in tax credits for energy efficiency home improvements, largely the same – but not identical – to those that expired at the end of 2007.  The tax credits apply for improvements “placed in service”  from January 1, 2009, through December 31, 2009.

Selected Tax Credits










* Maximum of $500 total for home improvements.
See this IRS fact sheet for more information: http://www.irs.gov/newsroom/article/0,,id=153397,00.html

What do customers need to do to get the tax credit? They will need to file IRS Form 5695 (http://www.irs.gov/pub/irs-pdf/f5695.pdf) with their taxes, and keep all receipts. For more information, see the Alliance to Save Energy website: (http://www.ase.org/content/article/detail/2654#taxcredit_intro)



What has this to do with infrared thermography?

The major advantage of infrared cameras is that they can image and measure surface temperatures and provide clear images that can be stored, sent and analyzed. Our inspector utilizes infrared cameras with special measurement features for building diagnostics which enables easy detection of building anomalies or suspect areas that often result into energy losses. Such cameras eliminate costly inspection techniques that require labor, time and destructive probing. Finding and repairing faulted areas thanks to infrared thermography saves energy resources, time, money and last but not least, provides a rapid return of investment on the infrared survey

What can be done with an infrared camera?
The infrared camera can be applied on the interior as well as exterior. Fields of application include any symptoms and signs marked by a temperature difference on a surface. Here’s a list of possible applications:

Leak, humidity detection
• Floor heating thermography
• Heating thermography inspections
• Building envelope thermography
• Air tightness testing
• Door seal inspection
• Wall seal heat loss inspection
• Moisture thermography inspections
• Roof moisture thermography

Building valuing/ damage, repair inspections
• Due diligence thermography
• Covered openings search in walls
• Work documentation, quality control (before and after repair)
• Energy investigations
• Education

Classic maintenance AND building application
• HVAC system performance and repair
• Home electrical inspection
• Indoor environment inspection
• Pest control
• Distant heating system inspection
• Checking drying efficiency of walls, floors, ceilings

Benefits : Infrared cameras pave the way to -
• reducing heating costs
• preserving and increasing the building substance
• supporting contractors in warranty claims
• checking repair quality
• detecting long-time construction damages
• detecting and preventing conditions conducive to mold and decay
• preventing formation of condensation
• preventing humidity intrusion in building

Purchase

Tax Savings Notes
Central air conditioner, heat pump, water heater, bio gas stove $300.00* Only some Energy Star products qualify.
Furnace or Boiler 150.00* Only some Energy Star products qualify.
Windows Up to $200* All Energy Star windows qualify
Insulation and sealing Up to $500* Must meet model building code as installed
Ground-source heat pump Up to $2,000 All Energy Star windows qualify

 

thermal image infrared scan columbus ohio

central ohio thermal image infrared scanning

ohio thermal image infrared scanning