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Look, you seem to have got your back for some reason, but if you don't explain the context or why you need the test and what it needs to demonstrate and to whom then the thread's gonna keep going round in circles.
 
Thermography makes it easier to identify the moisture condensation, defective concrete panels, joints between different materials, air leakage (filtration) through the building envelope (air barrier), irregularities in the heating system and makes it possible to localize defect and take necessary corrective actions. Best time for thermography is before interior works are done, right after windows installing and vapor barrier finishing.
 
I have never carried out such a test, my answer 'yes' in post No. 8 was in response to your intimation 'you believe its impractical.'

You seem to think this testing system you've found on Youtube will achieve what you want, it won't because it's not designed to be undertaken in occupied buildings.
 
You keep going, but this test will not do as you wish, it's flawed, it can only be performed in an unoccupied building prior to the finishes being applied. You realise my text from post No. 22 is a direct quote from IRBest, the Eastern European distributor of test equipment supplied by a Dutch manufacturer who is the source of your Youtube video? With no credence in the UK.
 
Sure, but that's not doing what you asked for. That's a standard New Build Air Tightness test that ticks a box or it doesn't, it doesn't provide any assistance as to where a building might be leaking.
 

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