fredhargis said:
Yeah, Magnehelics measure both positive and negative pressure.. They have high and low pressure ports on the back, you just use the correct one. You can also use them to measure differential pressures, which takes both ports....
What Fred said. The gauge has two ports - both high and low pressure - depending on the application you have in mind. The gauge works via comparison of the pressure difference between these two ports. For me, I utilized the low pressure port to measure the vacuum pressure in my duct. The high pressure port (with no hose attached to it leading to anywhere) is registering the pressure in the ambient air of the shop. So in my case, the pressure in my DC duct is 8 inches variant from the pressure observed in the room.
Regarding high and low pressure in a DC system, just know that anything upstream of the fan blades is low pressure (being sucked toward the fan), and everything downstream would be high pressure (being pushed away from the fan). Obviously, my application seems very simple, but it's all that is needed to gauge (pun fully intended) the performance of my filter.
Not to confuse you, but as Fred noted, professional installers often use both ports to measure the specific drop across a given membrane as shown below.
![](/ssl_proxy.php?url=/ssl_proxy.php?url=http://necc-controls.com/images/category/gauges/Dwyer-Magnehelic-3.jpg)
If I come across another cheaply, I may do as such on my house HVAC system (vs diligently replacing the filter every 3 months - whether it needs it or not). Certainly over the top, but we are nerds after all.
![](/ssl_proxy.php?url=/ssl_proxy.php?url=/ubbthreads/images/graemlins/yellowbiggrin.gif)
Hope that helps.
EDIT: FWIW, that diagram above is the application which Miser has his deployed. He has his measuring the actual filter back pressure in (relation to ambient air pressure - hence no second tube). So whereas I would be looking for a vacuum drop from 8" down to maybe 6", he will be looking for an increase in back pressure from 1" to maybe 3". His is actually a more precise configuration than how mine is installed, but I opted to not drill a hole in my DC flange. I'll live with this for awhile but can always reposition down the road.