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russ_watters said:That was for a dryer though an I was thinking your damper might be on the fan. That's common:
This is the unit I have in both bathrooms
https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B00DFE5ZV2/?tag=pfamazon01-20
russ_watters said:That was for a dryer though an I was thinking your damper might be on the fan. That's common:
This one is for a 4inch duct, but the specs and backpressure curves look compatible, and it's cheap enough to try. Note this is to be insalled in a horizontal run of ducting.russ_watters said:I was referring to this:
https://www.homedepot.com/p/VENTS-U...gclsrc=aw.ds&dclid=CPC2952b9tcCFei4swodPecDaQ
Unbelievable considering it wasn't a cheap model. I suppose I have to remove it to get the damper in. hmmmmTom.G said:Perhaps one needs to be added.
Pro tip: add a "PDF" to the google search and you get the official engineering submittal document:Tom.G said:The manufacturers website (http://ventfans-search.aiprx.us.panasonic.com/FV-11VQL6.html) says nothing about a damper being included.
Ratios!russ_watters said:...
Not sure what you were after with R-Value, but Greg is asking about direct air leakage...
I have new thermal windows from Home depot in all of my windows, not a whiff of a breeze. I also have storm doors at every door, and NO wind coming through the doors. Also, I can remove the thermal glass in the spring and just have screen doors in cooler weather.Greg Bernhardt said:So pretty much I should stop wasting my time and just deal with the energy bill?
Greg Bernhardt said:I think I’ve nailed the culprit to being the fire place. The damper is pinned open due to the gas logs and are only have a moveable metal mesh grate over the opening. If I install fixed glass doors would that help? They wouldn’t be air tight.
Tough call. You might want to check with the manufacturer.Greg Bernhardt said:I think I’ve nailed the culprit to being the fire place. The damper is pinned open due to the gas logs and are only have a moveable metal mesh grate over the opening. If I install fixed glass doors would that help? They wouldn’t be air tight.
Exactly, by design the damper needs to be pinned open for pilot exhaust.NTL2009 said:Why pinned open - what does that have to do with "gas logs"? Is there a constant pilot or something?
How often do you use it? I'd consider turning the pilot off, and lighting when I use it, and removing the pin.Greg Bernhardt said:Exactly, by design the damper needs to be pinned open for pilot exhaust.
Pilot lights on those are extremely rare. More likely a safety consideration for when someone doesn't turn the gas valve completely closed. As an alternative safety feature you could install an automatic gas shutoff valve that uses a thermocouple to keep the gas on only when it is hot. They are used on almost all gas appliances with a pilot light. The drawback is you have to hold their Reset button depressed until the thermocouple heats up on startup.NTL2009 said:Why pinned open - what does that have to do with "gas logs"? Is there a constant pilot or something?
Greg Bernhardt said:I think I’ve nailed the culprit to being the fire place. The damper is pinned open due to the gas logs and are only have a moveable metal mesh grate over the opening. If I install fixed glass doors would that help? They wouldn’t be air tight.