Small manufacturer environmental monitoring gives production managers and facility operators the continuous data they need to protect process quality, verify HVAC performance, and catch environmental problems before they affect yield. In a small manufacturing facility, the building and the process are inseparable — humidity affects cure times, temperature affects adhesive performance, and tVOC levels reflect whether ventilation is keeping pace with what production is generating. Nosy puts wireless sensors across the entire facility, tracking all of these parameters every five minutes in every zone, with automated monthly reports that surface the findings that matter most.

For Small and Mid-Size Manufacturing Facilities

In a Small Manufacturing Facility, the Building Is Part of the Process

Your process runs in an environment. That environment shapes the output. Ink and coatings cure differently at high humidity. ESD risk increases when humidity drops. Adhesives and resins respond to temperature. Your HVAC either keeps up with the demands of your process, or it doesn't.

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Process ↔ Environment
Process
Soldering, coatings, resins, cleaning agents affect air quality
Environment
Humidity, temp, and VOCs affect process outcomes and yields

Shop Floor — Live Zones
Assembly
71°F
45% RH ✓
Solder Station
74°F
tVOC ⚠
Storage
78°F
68% RH !

Trusted by small and mid-size manufacturing facilities across the U.S.

The Problem With Small Manufacturing Environments

The relationship between environment and process runs in both directions. Processes affect the environment: soldering, cleaning baths, resins, and adhesives all put contaminants into the air, and ventilation that looked adequate in the building spec may not be keeping pace with what your production actually generates. But the environment also affects the process. Humidity above a certain threshold can cause coatings and inks to not cure properly. At low humidity, ESD risk rises — a significant concern in electronics assembly. Temperature gradients across a floor affect process consistency in ways that rarely announce themselves as an obvious cause when yields drop.

None of these problems tend to be visible until something goes wrong. The typical approach is reactive: wait for a quality issue or a production problem, then investigate. By the time a pattern becomes obvious, it's usually been running for a while.

Facilities planning an expansion, renovation, or major HVAC upgrade face a related challenge. Without baseline data on current conditions, it's hard to specify the right system, know whether it's delivering in the zones that matter, or verify improvements after the work is done.

To understand how continuous monitoring fits into a broader approach to building management, see What Is Fractional BAS?

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How Nosy Helps Small Manufacturers

See How Every Zone Is Actually Performing

A solder station generates VOCs in a way that a storage room doesn't. A shipping dock has different ventilation dynamics than an assembly area. Nosy puts sensors across the whole facility and shows each zone independently — so you can see where conditions are within spec and where they're not.

Connect Environmental Conditions to Process Outcomes

Humidity creeping above the range for your process. CO2 rising in a production area during a busy shift. Temperature gradients forming between a heat-generating zone and adjacent work areas. These are the kinds of conditions that affect yield and consistency before anyone notices.

Use Real Data to Plan and Verify Facility Changes

If your facility is planning an expansion, renovation, or major HVAC upgrade, Nosy gives you a documented picture of current conditions across the whole facility — and a way to verify that changes are actually delivering the improvements they were designed to.

What You'll See

Nosy monitors the parameters most relevant to a light manufacturing environment:

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Humidity

Often the most process-critical parameter. High humidity can extend cure times for inks, coatings, and adhesives, and creates conditions where moisture-sensitive components absorb damaging moisture. Low humidity increases ESD risk — a significant concern in electronics assembly and PCB work.

🌡️

Temperature

Reveals heat load patterns zone by zone, showing where process equipment, solar gain, or HVAC imbalances are creating conditions that affect process consistency. Temperature also affects adhesive viscosity, cure rates, and the performance of materials that have operating windows.

🌬️

Indoor Air Quality (tVOC)

Captures airborne compounds from soldering, cleaning agents, adhesives, resins, and other process materials. This is the parameter most directly tied to exhaust and ventilation effectiveness — it shows whether air exchange in a given zone is keeping up with what the process is generating.

☁️

Carbon Dioxide (CO₂)

Tracks ventilation effectiveness in proportion to occupancy and activity. In a production facility, elevated CO2 in a work zone is a signal that air exchange isn't keeping pace. It's also a useful overall indicator of HVAC performance across the facility.

Every month, Nosy generates an automated report showing which areas had persistent issues, which had intermittent problems, and how conditions tracked over time and against outdoor weather.

80% lower Total Cost of Ownership vs. traditional industrial monitoring systems
<5 min per sensor to install, no tools or contractors
14 sensors cover a 6,500 sq ft facility at a light manufacturing pilot site
2,000+ unique measurements per sensor per day, across 7 parameters

14 Sensors. 6,500 Sq Ft PCB Facility. Connecticut.

At a PCB manufacturing and assembly facility in Connecticut, Nosy is deployed with 14 sensors across approximately 6,500 square feet of production, assembly, and office space. The facility runs soldering operations and assembly lines with a mix of process-driven and occupancy-driven environmental factors.

Monitoring identified elevated CO2 readings that warranted further investigation into a potential boiler issue — a finding that would not have surfaced through periodic inspection alone. The deployment is also generating the baseline environmental data the facility needs to inform an upcoming HVAC upgrade, so the new system can be specified around actual conditions and its performance verified once installed.

14 sensors across 6,500 sq ft of production, assembly, and office space
1 potential boiler issue identified via elevated CO2 — invisible to periodic inspection
Pre + Post HVAC baseline data being collected ahead of planned upgrade

Common Questions from Manufacturers

Nosy is designed for commercial buildings up to 100,000 square feet, which includes light manufacturing, assembly, and production facilities. The sensor parameters — especially tVOC, CO2, and humidity — are directly relevant to manufacturing environments where processes affect the environment and the environment affects the process.
Each sensor tracks temperature, relative humidity, CO2, IAQ/tVOC (total volatile organic compounds), atmospheric pressure, ambient light intensity, and simple occupancy. Each sensor generates over 2,000 unique measurements per day. Monthly reports also incorporate local weather conditions.
Yes. Nosy provides the baseline environmental data that shows where current conditions fall short, and gives you a way to verify improvements once the work is done. Pre- and post-change data from the same sensors in the same locations makes it straightforward to document what changed and where gaps remain.
A periodic assessment gives you a snapshot of conditions at one point in time, on the day the inspector visits. Nosy gives you continuous data across every monitored zone, every day. Seasonal variation, production schedule changes, and gradual drift in HVAC performance all show up in continuous data in ways a snapshot can't capture.
A full BAS typically costs $2.50 to $7 per square foot to install and requires specialized contractors and ongoing technical support. For a small manufacturing facility, those costs are rarely justified. Nosy's Total Cost of Ownership (TCO) is up to 80% lower, and it installs without any modifications to the building or production equipment. See Fractional BAS vs. Full BAS: What's the Difference?
No. Sensors mount using adhesive strips and require no wiring, drilling, or contractor work. A typical deployment takes a few hours and can be scheduled around production. There is no downtime.
Almost immediately. Floorplan heatmaps and trend views populate as data accumulates over the first days and weeks. Monthly automated reports begin after the first full month of data collection.

See What's Happening on Your Floor

Ready to move from guesswork to data?

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