TROLLCAT
Active VIP Member
I don't know, mine is horizontalIs that design common for vertical installs???
I don't know, mine is horizontalIs that design common for vertical installs???
. If you don’t want ti climb up the just disconnect the supply air pipe going to the furnace and let us suck the air out of the house when it’s cold like this.
Same here, thats why im going to change it. Little cold for that today though! HahaI bought this place already built otherwise no way I would allow it to be installed this way, in no way does it make any type of advantageous sense
Yes it will for him. The exhaust gasses are cooling too much thru the uninsulated attic. If it’s kept warmer it won’t freeze. He will have 2 separate pipe right up to where they go through the roof. Pretty common when the pipes run through cold spaces. Happens in long cold horizontal runs of pipe too if there are not insulated when they run under a deck or similar.It freezes up at the exit point. Insulating the inside wont stop it.
Yes it will for him. The exhaust gasses are cooling too much thru the uninsulated attic. If it’s kept warmer it won’t freeze. He will have 2 separate pipe right up to where they go through the roof. Pretty common when the pipes run through cold spaces. Happens in long cold horizontal runs of pipe too if there are not insulated when they run under a deck or similar.
He could cutThe stack a bit shorter above the roof too
Vertical stacks use a condensate pump to push the water to a floor drain (normally)My boiler runs my heat exchanger and my pipes run horizontally out the side of my house it’s high efficiency and fills a 5 gallon pail with water every week when it is this cold that water in vertical pipes might be the problem don’t think the fan would have the power to push it that high when it is this cold
It’s his exhaust freezing not the intake. The exhaust is full of moister and water. It’s all grades down hill and runs back to the furnace and eventually down the drain.Ya those 2 into one exhaust intake pipe thingys suck ass. Mine is freezing up to.
Intake freezes up with exhaust moisture, and doesnt take much because the pipe is too small.
Just gotta bang out the ice once in a while.
In the spring ill switch to a 2 pipe setup,
2 into 1 Sucking exhaust into the intake is a retarded design...
Is there a certain type to use? Or an r value I should look to hit?Insulate it where it run there the attic.
Mine is warm except the last 6 inches and yet it freezes.It’s his exhaust freezing not the intake. The exhaust is full of moister and water. It’s all grades down hill and runs back to the furnace and eventually down the drain.
You would be surprise how much water is draining back. Disconnect the drain in your furnace room and it would flood your basement
Two separate pipes will still have the exhaust freeze if it runs too far through cold spaces if it’s not insulated.
Horizontal venting can suck too if it’s dumping gallons of water on your sidewalks or driveway to freeze
Condensate pump has nothing to do with vertical stack or horizontal.Vertical stacks use a condensate pump to push the water to a floor drain (normally)
Mechanical shops will have a black foam for the pipe size. Armaflex or something.Is there a certain type to use? Or an r value I should look to hit?