Tip:
Highlight text to annotate it
X
Let's begin with a closer look
at what is perhaps our most revolutionary new product,
the TopJet TJ4200 Attic Inlet.
The metal roof and the attic of a poultry house act as a giant solar collector.
Attic temperatures range between five and 30 degrees above outside air.
This is basically a free source of heat,
that until now was wasted energy.
With a TopJet Attic Inlet,
you can tap into this abundant source of free heat
and distribute it throughout your facility.
The TopJet is specifically designed to work
with a poultry house's minimum ventilation fans,
to collect this valuable source of heat.
When the fans turn on, the attic inlets open.
The drier, warmer attic air is distributed evenly in four directions,
thus minimizing harmful drafts.
When the ventilation fans shut-off, the counterweight ceiling inlet firmly closes,
keeping the hot air from leaving the house.
During the warmer times of the year,
when supplemental heat is not needed,
the TJ4200 TopJet Inlet can easily be locked closed.
It's a snap to put the TopJet TJ4200 Attic Inlet together and installation is simple.
In order to maximize the function of the inlets,
Double L provides installation guidelines as to the number of inlets needed
and optimal spacing for your particular application.
The TopJet Attic Inlet is a breakthrough in poultry ventilation.
While a typical poultry house without attic ventilation
pulls in outside air using conventional sidewall inlets,
a house with a TopJet Attic Inlet also pulls in the free solar heated air
from the attic
and distributes this warmer air throughout the house.
The Results....
less humidity - this means drier litter and substantially reduced heating costs.
In short, the TopJet Attic Inlet saves you money
and increases productivity.
It's the most efficient way to heat a chicken house I have ever seen in my life
and it makes sense.
I understood it immediately when I saw it.
All the heat is in the attic.
We are paying a fortune to insulate the attic of our poultry houses to keep the heat
out of the chicken house
and we don't use it to actually heat the chicken house.
Well, with the ceiling inlets you're bringing the heat from the attic,
not the outside.
So, you got this heat that is 20 degrees warmer
than your 30 degrees outside temperature.
So, you're bringing in a 50-degree heat,
which is drier than your 30-degree humid outside temperature
and there is not a grower in the world
that doesn't go into a poultry house and hear their sidewall inlets open
and every brooder and furnace they've got
cut on and absolutely make you physically sick.
I am really, really, extremely excited about the TJ4200 TopJet Attic Inlets.
I have used them for a year on previous houses
and we have had tremendous fuel savings.
You are bringing in drier, warmer air
and we would all like to
heat our chicken houses for free basically
and have a better performance in our birds.