How to use the diagramRead the visual first, then connect each label to the lesson text and your calculator inputs. The aim is to make every assumption visible before you calculate.
Learning Objective
Prepare clear notes for approval or review.
Report by assembly
Where multiple floor types exist, report them separately so each condition can be checked.
Coordinate drawings
The report should agree with architectural sections and specifications.
Practice Task
Write one floor compliance note.
Cross-check it against the section drawing.
Calculator Tip
Do not merge unlike floor assemblies into one unexplained value.
Worked Example: Envelope Floor Decision
Scenario
A slab-on-ground living area and an internal upper floor both appear on the drawings.
Calculator Entry
Only enter floor assemblies that form part of the thermal envelope.
Step-by-step method
1Identify which floor separates conditioned space from ground, outside air or unconditioned space.
2Exclude internal floors that are not part of the thermal envelope.
3Record slab, insulation and edge assumptions.
4Check drawings against the floor compliance note.
Expected conclusion
Scope clarity prevents internal floors from distorting the envelope check.
Common Mistakes
Including internal floors that are not part of the thermal envelope.
Forgetting edge conditions, ground contact or unconditioned spaces.
Merging different floor assemblies without a clear reason.
Quick Knowledge Check
1. What should you confirm before applying this lesson to a project?
Each floor type is named.
2. Which piece of evidence should support the main input in this lesson?
Write one floor compliance note.
3. What is the safest action if the information is incomplete?
Flag the missing evidence, use a conservative assumption where appropriate, and avoid claiming compliance until the information is confirmed.