July 25, 2021 Salty Air Publishing Newsletter

*|MC:SUBJECT|*
View this email in your browser
Outside Temperature: 69 °F
Outside Relative Humidity: 81%
Sunrise: 5:28 AM EDT
July 25, 2021 - Falmouth, MA
In this issue:
Do you remember how you learned to read?
Private Viewing - Geoff Palmer
Pressure
Yellow Umbrella Bookstore - Chatham, MA
Benjamin Bunny & the Rabbit Hole
PHR Books
PHR Work in Progress
How about a free book or two?
Your Turn

 
Do you remember how you learned to read?
I don't remember how I learned to read. At some point the things I saw and the sounds that I heard and the sounds I could make suddenly became symbols on a page. When I got out of college, I had the honor of teaching in a one room school house on the coast of Labrador in Canada. That adventure helped me to remember how I learned many things including learning to read.
English has many blazingly complicated ways of spelling things like flew and flue, book and boot, or break and freak.
Reading is one of those things that we take for granted. Once you learn how, it's as natural as breathing. But unlike breathing, reading does have to be learned. We should not take reading for granted. It is a gift. And that gift is directly connected to writing. The connection between the written word and the sounds words invoke in our heads is magical.

Stay well,
Paul

P.S. There's more to this newsletter. Please keep reading.
Private Viewing - Geoff Palmer
Published in 2015 by Podsnap Publishing, Inc.

I am always pleasantly surprised when I come upon a writer who knows what they are doing and cares about how they are doing it. Geoff Palmer is one of those pleasant surprises. He won some awards and spent twenty plus years doing freelance technical writing. From his bio, "he has climbed mountains in Africa, picked grapes in Switzerland, sold cameras in London programmed computers in Fiji, and spent eight years working as a professional photographer. He's also quite tall." He lives and writes in Wellington, New Zealand.

Jane Child, the protagonist of this story, is a banker. At the beginning of the novel she thought she had a straight line path to a Divisional Manager role at Bartley's Bank. It is not to be, however, because the position has been filled by a rising star in the British banking world who just happens to be the son of Sir Jamieson Trotter who has deep societal connections.

But Damien Trotter is good looking and Jane is good looking and despite her best efforts she not able to resist Damien's charms. It is not at all surprising that Damien turns out to be an ultimate salacious sleaze. What is a surprise is the role that the seemingly homeless man who sits on the sidewalk across the street from the bank plays in the story. Jane is not the most sensible young woman but she is a romantic and that gets her into trouble.

Palmer develops his characters well including the minor ones like good-old Aunt Daisy and the neighborhood cat, Bluebell. There are a plethora of spy gadgets and technology which is always fun and with Palmer's experience with computers in Fiji, I am assuming he got that stuff right. There is the occasional word that is missing, but that seems to be common, unfortunately, these days. No matter how many times you read through your own book, it is easy to see the words on the page the way you are seeing them in your head.

Private Viewing is a fun, entertaining read, with enough suspense to keep the pages turning and midnight lamp burning.
Pressure

In the world of building science, pressure is key. The second law of thermodynamics mandates that high pressure goes to low pressure. If the pressure in the house is higher than the pressure in the chimney, the smoke goes up the chimney -- and that's a good thing! The pressure on the exhaust side of window fan is higher than the pressure on the intake side. The pressure on the supply side of an air handler fan is higher than the pressure on the return side.

Pressures in a house makes the air go around, the air go around, the air go around!


If you are designing a whole house ventilation system, the first issue is to have a pressure plan particularly if there is an atmospherically driven heating appliance. There has to be positive pressure in the combustion appliance zone (CAZ) relative to the flue so that the combustion gases flow up the chimney and not into the house.

Then you want to remove pollutants at the source, such in bathrooms and kitchens. HRAI (Heating, Refrigeration, and Air Conditioning Institute of Canada) recommends removing 60 cfm continuously from the kitchen and 20 cfm from each bathroom.

HRAI also recommends supply air to Category A rooms: 20 cfm to the Master Bedroom, and 10 cfm in single bedrooms, the Living Room, Dining Room, Family Room and other habitable rooms. They also recommend supplying 10 cfm to Category B rooms like the kitchen, bathrooms, laundry room, and utility room. Connecting the HRV/ERV to the supply side of the air handler means that the new air or fresh air will piggy-back on the conditioned air and be supplied to all the rooms. Greater fresh airflow control can be achieved by independent ventilation ducting, but that is often outside of the budget. Note that HRAI recommends lower supply rates than exhaust rates to the bathrooms and the kitchen so that those rooms will be under negative pressure.

Understanding the pressures in the house is the key to understanding how to achieve a comfortable and healthy indoor environment.
Yellow Umbrella Bookstore - Chatham, MA
In business since 1980, Yellow Umbrella Books stocks a wonderful selection of new books, children's books, as well as old and rarer finds. The book store can be found at 501 Main Street, Chatham, Massachusetts. Yellow Umbrella books is a place to browse, to touch and feel the cover and the pages of a great book. There is no other experience quite like holding, smelling, and reading a real book.
Benjamin Bunny & the Rabbit Hole

Finding out how things work
Big Clive is a large man who lives on the Isle of Man and takes things apart and reverse engineers them to figure out what makes them tick. Bill Spohn interviewed him recently on his Building HVAC Science podcast. Clive has some interesting thoughts about ozone.

Putting it all in one workspace
Notion is an app to keep track of the many things that you do. We all have so many options these days it is easy to lose track.

How fast is your website
The Lighthouse Chrome extension quickly generates a report for any website you visit, letting you know where it succeeds or fails in terms of accessibility. When I ran it on my site, I learned that I could add greater visual contrast as well as names and labels for my links.
PHR Books
Residential Ventilation Handbook V2
Recalculating Truth
Death at the Edge of the Diamond
Also available on-line and in fine bookshops.
PHR Work in Progress
The new novel - Second Law - has returned from my wonderful beta readers. I am now integrating all that information into a third draft and will begin my search for a comprehensive editor.
How about a free book or two?

BookFunnel provide a means for a group of authors to get together to give away electronic copies of their books in return for adding surbscribers to their mailing lists. I downloaded Private Viewing reviewed in this issue from one of these campaigns so there are some great, unrecognized writers to be found here. And you can't beat the price. So give it a go!
Click for Free Books
Your Turn: Favorite Summer Drinks
In my last issue I asked you about favorite summer drinks. Here's a selection of what you said.
  • Water - there is nothing better than a clean, cold glass of icewater, not just in summer but all year 'round! Stay away from the plastic disposable bottles though.
  • Iced tea, coffee, latte - any of those things. If you need the caffeine this is the place to get it.
  • Gatorade Zero - gets right to the heart of the thirst - and you don't have to pour it over your head!
  • Spindrift - Good in any season. More flavor than plain water.
Next Question: What is your favorite way to stay in shape? Hit reply to this message and let me know.
If you enjoyed this issue, please share it. Thank you!
Forward Forward
Salty Air Publishing Newsletter is a free, bi-weekly newsletter from Paul H. Raymer that launched in 2020. More than 1,000 subscribers receive it. Knowing that you are giving me your time to read these words, it is my goal to be as interesting and helpful as possible.

Thank you! You can support it by
giving me feedback and sharing the newsletter with friends and colleagues.
Twitter
Facebook
Instagram
Website
LinkedIn
Email
Copyright © *|CURRENT_YEAR|* *|LIST:COMPANY|*, All rights reserved.
*|IFNOT:ARCHIVE_PAGE|* *|LIST:DESCRIPTION|*

Our mailing address is:
*|HTML:LIST_ADDRESS_HTML|* *|END:IF|*

Our website is:
https://www.saltyairpublishing.com/

Want to change how you receive these emails?
You can update your preferences or unsubscribe from this list.

*|IF:REWARDS|* *|HTML:REWARDS|* *|END:IF|*