Becoming TAB certified can give a major boost to a technician’s career, as well as to a contractor’s bottom line. TAB stands for testing, adjusting, and balancing, and its domains are commercial and industrial air and hydronic systems.
According to the Testing, Adjusting, and Balancing Bureau (TABB) of the National Energy Management Institute Committee (NEMIC), “The purpose of TAB is to ensure that an HVAC system is providing maximum occupant comfort at the lowest energy cost possible.”
“HVAC contractors who don’t perform TAB work misunderstand the necessity for TAB testing,” said Roy Ringwood, board trustee of the Labor Management Coalition Trust (LMCT) between Orange County (Calif.) Local Sheet Metal Union 105 and Orange Empire Sheet Metal and Air Conditioning Contractors’ National Association (SMACNA).
Ringwood has served on the National Test & Air Balance Technical Task Force.
“You can have an environmentally safe building without TAB, but IAQ and energy consumption can be affected by problems that TAB testing would have caught.”
TAB has been around for quite some time. How has it changed? “In particular, enactment of the certification program is one of the major changes that TAB has undergone,” Ringwood said.
Today’s TAB certification means that the contractor, supervisor, and technician are all trained and certified. “There is a direct, comprehensive certification program for TAB. Before, a TAB-certified contractor didn’t have to have a certified technician.” Having certified techs, among other things, helps ensure that testing is performed accurately.
Another change in the program is that contractors have to sign a quality and integrity agreement, he pointed out. All three parties (contractor, supervisor, technician) must be recertified periodically.