Bathroom ventilation fan duct routing routing a bath vent duct down out or up through an attic or roof out.
Ok to attack duct directly to roof vent.
Or you may have a distance issue.
The owner s manual will usually tell you specifics on duct sizes and lengths.
You may have a bad boot around the roof vent that is leaking into the attic.
The high humid air doesn t vent out of the house before it condensates in the duct and then runs back into the house causing damage.
Loosely hold the wire and direct it through the ceiling drywall approximately where your vent pipe will go.
These specialty vents do not affect the.
This article describes routing bath exhaust fan duct upwards through an attic or roof space or downwards through a floor or crawl space.
In all cases the ducting needs to conduct the exchaust to the building exterior and needs to terminate in an animal proof vent cover.
Duct already wrapped in insulation at home centers.
If you stacked registers on a single duct on second and third floors for instance all the.
The fan ducts were attached to a t fitting in the 4 inch abs main sewer vent stack in the attic just below the roof.
Rafter vents or insulation baffles install in any rafter space to create narrow gaps that direct fresh air from the soffit vents to the peak of the roof.
I d recommend venting out the gable.
For that length i don t think you need to worry.
Run a rigid vent from the gable wall to a point near your install and use a 2 piece of flex duct to connect the fan to the rigid vent.
The flex duct makes the bends easy don t kink it and allows the fan to be repaired from below in the future.
First plan your route.
The vent should exit the building through the roof or wall at least 3 feet away from any other building openings and the vent cover which must not include a screen should allow dispersal of.
Section of straightened coat hanger into a drill.
Every register should be fed directly from the central unit or basement trunk line by its own duct.
The safest way to check the attic directly above the stove is to chuck an 18 in.
Another biggie that i see all the time is sagging ducts.
The best exhaust fan venting is through smooth rigid ducts with taped joints and screwed to a special vent hood.
Although this isn t always possible in attic crawl spaces you should always insulate the duct to prevent condensation problems.
After sleeping on it i am having a hard time coming up with any legitimate reason it can t work and can t think of any problem it could cause.
The official recommendation from the adc is that flex ducts should sag no more than 1 2 per foot of length between supports.
You can find 4 in.
Insulating the duct may also help.
I have never seen this before and at first thought considered it wrong.