| I do not believe that people realize  that a non-union shop and a company like ours who does not have a  tinning shop in house can do commercial work properly. I can not take  any credit for the ductwork. As stated, there was nearly two months of  planning going into this job. Key was to engineer the  duct based on AIRFLOW....and that is what most guys who are getting  their feet wet in light commercial RTU replacements are totally  oblivious to.  The area was laser  mapped and that was transferred into the computer with my sheet metal  guys (Metco Metal). They basically go to work with the engineering for  the rooftop, engineering for the curb, and existing roof penetrating  duct. All in all, they come up with duct sizing, transition angles,  turning vanes, and what all is needed to achieve optimal air flow and at  the same time fit 6 pounds of salami in a 2 pound bag. This info was  then taken to the curb manufacturer (KCC) and they build to spec what my  metal guys need.  All in all everything is delivered on site and their is a lot of nail biting as the pieces all join together like Legos.  The most critical part  on the 40 ton unit was setting the curb. That curb had to be perfectly  set with no more than a ¼" tolerance. It was decided to set the curb and  attach the return air ducting first. It is a whole lot easier to make  small adjustments with moving the curb, when there is no rooftop unit  setting on it. As soon as the curb and return air ducting was all  attached and lined up, the RTU was dropped in place.  Now the real challenge  of praying and nail biting that the side discharge plenum off of the RTU  unit itself and the transition pieces off of the existing roof supply  plenum would all fall into place......and obviously they did. I had my  son and a few other boys from the high school football team with buckets  of pooky/mastic, go to work after things calmed down. 
 40 tonner in the air. 
 Flat beds with the new and the old. 
 New 40 ton curb and  return air duct prepped and ready for the new unit. Took about 40  minutes to attach the new duct, perfectly designed via computer CAD for  air-flow and near perfect installation. 
 40 tonner set,  installed, final duct, and final programming/commissioning of system,  duct static system, economizer, and freak drives for supply and power  exhaust. (SimplicityPC/YORK Millennium...easy-squeazy). 
 
 
 
 
 20 tonner in the air...quite the reach. Custom curb and  duct all CAD drawn and designed for air-flow...turning vanes and all.  Commissioning on this guy was a breeze. Got her tweaked at 1.1"WC...unit  is constant volume. 
 
 
 So, in a nutshell, this is just one of many jobs we do,  nothing special, I can not take any credit for the ductwork.....I just  have the right companies in my pocket to work along side as a team to  get the job done properly, accurately, quickly, and professionally. The mall in question is having a painting company coming  out to paint the ductwork with a special heavy epoxy based paint to  water seal, weatherproof, rust protect, and at the same time, the mall  sets along side a freeway and it is a beautiful sight for an HVAC guy,  but can be an eyesore for people driving by. So choice was made to match paint color of duct with the York paint scheme. Will post picture of that when final.
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