Why is it in Hollywood movies every time there is a vent or AC unit someone has fixed little ribbons on it? Is that a thing americans do? Why? The vent in this movie is close to the floor in the toilets of a train. This implies someone got on all fours ON THE FLOOR OF A TRAIN’S BATHROOM to stick those ribbons there for a reason i can’t even begin to comprehend.
The practice is only used when the vents are hard to reach, Hollywood puts them eveyrwhere, like OP said behind a toilet, where the technician can easily verify by hand or with the actual tool to measure airflow so they have an actual metric to see if it’s deteriorating.
Its a Hollywood trope.
It’s not a thing in real life either…
HVAC techs will use the anemometer that’s part of their standard kit, they aren’t going to tie a fire hazard that collects dust to a duct….
If you see them left behind, that’s because the company was too cheap to cleanup their garbage, they would ONLY be used while the techs were actively diagnosing a persistent issue, but it should be removed when done.
Why do people perpetuate obvious fake Hollywood stuff? Do you think code will allow you to permanently affix something flammable to a duct that would be heated and can catch it on fire……?
It’s not a thing in real life either…
then
If you see them left behind, that’s because
That pretty much says it IS a thing in real life. It may not be supposed to be there, but it does appear in real life.
code will allow you tie someything flammable to a duct that would be heated and can catch it on fire
… how hot do you think the air coming out of a duct is? Also, this isn’t a discussion about what codes allow, this is about what happens in practice.
they would ONLY be used while the techs were actively diagnosing a persistent issue
I’ve personally seen them placed by people who were having issues with building management messing up the hvac schedule, and I’m sure there are other cases where they would be used. You’re extrapolating your one use case to everything else.
Why do people perpetuate obvious fake Hollywood stuff
All I said was, there’s a real life basis for the trope. And there is, even you’ve admitted to it. So I’m not sure what your big argument is about…