To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Anyone have exhaust ventilation?

jwillis

Banned
Joined
Aug 24, 2010
Messages
5,225
Location
SW Ohio
I am kinda new here so this may have been dicussed in the past, so bear with me if it has. But I was just wondering if any of you have put in an exhaust ventilation system in your garages so you can run your cars inside in the winter? I am talking about the rubber hoses that you run hook up to the exhaust pipe and run out through an opening in the door or the wall of your garages. Anyone have these in your garage? Thanks..............j willis
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

moparman451

Member
Joined
Apr 5, 2006
Messages
11
Location
Southern, New Hampshire
I use "Crushproof" hose in my garage and installed the "Crushpoof aluminum door port" in my garage door. You have to make sure the hose fits tight around the tail pipe to avoid fumes, I have to wrap my 2" tail pipe to take up the space around my 2 1/2" hose, I'm sure they make adapters for this purpose, just never looked into it.

Greg Smith Equipment sells the hose I have, not sure if it could be found cheaper somewhere else.
http://www.gregsmithequipment.com/Exhaust-Hose-s/128.htm
 

Iroc-Z

Well-known member
Joined
Mar 21, 2006
Messages
720
Location
New Germany, MN
When I build my new garage I will be running tube in the floor for exhaust. All you need is some pcv pipe, a fan, and a motor to run the fan. The exhaust it out the roof. Heck an old furnace fan would work.
 

ultgar

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2005
Messages
1,119
Location
New Jersey
porsche-fume1-1000.jpg


garage1207b.jpg


Plug-in wall ports on either side of the shop....for single or dual exhaust cars.

exhaustfan3.jpg


ExhaustSilencer2.jpg


FumeVent2.jpg
 

Andy Griffith

ALLIANCE MEMBER
Joined
Sep 2, 2009
Messages
1,367
Location
Western WA
I use "Crushproof" hose in my garage and installed the "Crushpoof aluminum door port" in my garage door. You have to make sure the hose fits tight around the tail pipe to avoid fumes, I have to wrap my 2" tail pipe to take up the space around my 2 1/2" hose, I'm sure they make adapters for this purpose, just never looked into it.
I have the same thing in my shop. The port is in the roll-up door on the same stall that the lift is in. I also got enough hose length that I can run from the vehicle to the door port whether the vehicle is on the floor or in the air on the lift.

Be careful where you install the door port as if it's installed below the latch a person maybe could reach up through the port and undo the lock/latch.
 

ultgar

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2005
Messages
1,119
Location
New Jersey
With a fan forced exhaust system, the hose/collector doesn't need to slip over the exhaust pipe which allows the system to draw in cooling ambient air and avoids scratching the paintwork. I made up a pair of stands with adjustable height and angle for the exhaust collection system.

exhauststand-1.jpg


exhauststand-3.jpg


exhauststand-2.jpg


SD
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!

Stuart in MN

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 8, 2005
Messages
23,124
Location
Minneapolis
Ultgar, does that system you posted have a means for bringing fresh air into the garage when the exhaust fans are running?
 

strelnik

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 10, 2010
Messages
177
Location
Midwest rust belt
I am kinda new here so this may have been dicussed in the past, so bear with me if it has. But I was just wondering if any of you have put in an exhaust ventilation system in your garages so you can run your cars inside in the winter? I am talking about the rubber hoses that you run hook up to the exhaust pipe and run out through an opening in the door or the wall of your garages. Anyone have these in your garage? Thanks..............j willis


My plan is to have a wooden shutter over one of my caged window areas, with a dryer-vent type connection, two hoses and a shop vac to provide the intakes and the oomph! for the exhaust.

Use it when I need it, it's stored when I don't. Plus the shop vac will have multiple uses.
 

Stuart in MN

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 8, 2005
Messages
23,124
Location
Minneapolis
There's an Aprilaire 8126 fresh air ventilation damper with a wall mounted controller. SD

Great, thanks!

This is an important point if you're planning on a system like this - for it to work properly (and safely) you need to have a means to let fresh air into the garage while the exhaust is being sucked out.
 

72Wagon

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 21, 2006
Messages
103
Location
Virginia
I have 4 inch pvc buried into the concrete with 4 inlets (2 in each bay). the pipe then passes up the side wall and out the roof. works using the chimney effect. The other side of the pipe exits the side of the slab that is above grade so I can flush any debri that gets into the pipe. All unused openings must be plugged for proper flow. I use exhaust rubber flex hose to hook to the car.
This system works well for normal engine operation, and is not for dyno runs, I couldn't afford the dyno anyways!
 

kartracer23

Well-known member
Joined
Aug 7, 2008
Messages
1,455
Location
New Castle, IN
Just saw this. It ain't cheap, but I'm guessing it would be pretty easy to fab something similar up.

http://www.carguygarage.com/portableexhaust.html

Take a good size dolly, mount a piece of speedrail to it vertical so you could adjust the height. Aluminum funnel connected to some vent pipe with a bracket to mount to the speedrail. Then a computer fan from RadioShack mounted in line in the vent. You could probably mount the fan right on the dolly.
 

ultgar

Well-known member
Joined
Jan 11, 2005
Messages
1,119
Location
New Jersey
Just saw this. It ain't cheap, but I'm guessing it would be pretty easy to fab something similar up.

http://www.carguygarage.com/portableexhaust.html

Take a good size dolly, mount a piece of speedrail to it vertical so you could adjust the height. Aluminum funnel connected to some vent pipe with a bracket to mount to the speedrail. Then a computer fan from RadioShack mounted in line in the vent. You could probably mount the fan right on the dolly.


Looks like cheap dryer vent hose....for $1200, I'd expect something a little more durable. SD
 
To avoid these ads, REGISTER NOW!
Top Bottom