Ductwork and attenuation, Ventilation air – Mammoth 7 to 24 Tons: High Efficiency, Superior IAQ Twin and Quad Circuit Horizontal and Vertical (M-Vintage) User Manual
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MAMM-WSHP-IOM-1MA (November 2011)
Ductwork and Attenuation
Discharge ductwork is normally used with the M-
vintage horizontal and vertical multiple circuit units. 
Return air ductwork may also be required. 
 
All ductwork should conform to industry standards 
of good practice as described in the ASHRAE Systems 
Guide. 
 
The discharge duct system will normally consist of 
a flexible connector at the unit connection, a transition 
piece to the full duct size, a short run of duct, 
and elbow with vanes, and a trunk duct teeing into 
a branch duct with discharge diffuses. The transition 
piece must not have angles totaling more than 
30° or severe reduction in airflow performance can 
result. 
Do not connect the full duct size to the unit. Use a 
transition piece sized according to the discharge collar 
on the unit to get to the full duct size. With metal duct 
material, the sides of only the elbow and entire branch 
duct should be internally lined with acoustic fibrous 
insulation for sound attenuation. Glass fiber duct board 
material is more absorbing and may permit omission of 
the canvas connector. 
 
The ductwork should be laid out so that there is no 
line of sight between the unit discharge and 
the distribution diffusers. 
 
Do not use sheet metal screws directly into the unit 
cabinet for connection of supply or return air ductwork, 
especially return ductwork which can hit the drain pan 
or the air coil. 
Outside air may be required for ventilation. The 
temperature of the ventilation air must be controlled so 
that the mixture of outside air and return air entering 
the 
unit is within application limits. It is typical to close off 
the ventilation air system during unoccupied periods 
(i.e. night setback). 
The ventilation air system is typically a separate 
building subsystem with distribution ductwork. Simple 
introduction of the outside air into each return air 
plenum chamber reasonably close to the unit air inlet is 
recommended. Do not duct outside air directly to the 
unit inlet. Provide sufficient distance for the thorough 
mixing of outside and return air. 
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Ventilation Air
