Imok2,
Click on the piece below to see an artile by trane. I have since spoken to the controls people and a few sensors on more than 1 floor seems a better idea and average them out.
You are correct about the stack effect and the need to vary the pressure between winter and summer. My building is in Sydney so outsdie temp vary from about 15-30 degC during the occupied period. Im going to hold a slightly positive pressure, but location of outsdie sensors is going to be a problem. Will need at least 2 out side.
Also is attached a responce from Trane (same person who wrote the artice) on how to achieve the return air fan set point pressure.
Transe Responce:
####"When using a return fan, the highest pressure in the return air plenum (downstream of the return fan) must be sufficient to overcome the pressure drop in the relief air path (usually some duct, a damper and a louver) at maximum relief airflow. Most designers assume that maximum relief airflow equals design supply airflow less both local exhaust and local exfiltration airflow. This approach assumes that the supply fan delivers design airflow when the system enters 100% economizer mode and results in an slightly high relief airflow. Remember, space sensible load at the 100% economizer condition is lower than design space load, so supply airflow is actually somewhat less than design airflow.
Note: although it’s possible, the recirculated return path pressure drop (through the wide-open return damper, at design recirculated return airflow) is seldom greater than the relief path pressure drop described above.
The optimized damper approach is simple, logically, but must be tuned for each system. The logic is this: control relief damper position to maintain building pressure set point, and control outdoor air damper position to maintain outdoor airflow set point, control return damper position to maintain outdoor damper at or nearly 100% open, reset return plenum pressure set point to keep either the relief damper or the return damper at or nearly 100% open, and finally, control return fan speed to maintain the current return air plenum pressure set point. The logic is simple and results in the lowest pressure rise across each fan. The control system must be tuned, however, with damper motion speeds and fan speed reset rates that are appropriate for the specific building system, to avoid accuracy and stability problems.###"
Regards
Billyq