FastEddieG
Well-known member
Hey guys,
I was toying with the idea of doing my own garage furnace again. In my old house, I put in a ventless wall mount. The gas pipe was close by in the basement and easy to tap into, and there were no vents to deal with. It was a confidence builder. However, in this house, the gas pipe is 30' away and would be difficult for me to tap into and run due to lack of unions in the vicinity. Plus, I am going with a vented furnace this time so in order to vent horizontally, it will go through brick. Not zesty and makes me uncomfortable.
I don't have the experience or skill for either of those, and it would require lots of pipe cutting and threading which I don't have the tools for, so I am hiring one of my brother's friends to do it. Union guy looking for side work because of this crappy economy. $1325 for the 45k furnace, supplies and installation. (a little less than half for labor). After thinking about it, I decided it's well worth it to me to have it done so quickly and done right.
So, did any of you horizontally vent your garage furnace? Have any pics you can share of how it looks outside of the building?
Thanks in advance,
-Ed
I was toying with the idea of doing my own garage furnace again. In my old house, I put in a ventless wall mount. The gas pipe was close by in the basement and easy to tap into, and there were no vents to deal with. It was a confidence builder. However, in this house, the gas pipe is 30' away and would be difficult for me to tap into and run due to lack of unions in the vicinity. Plus, I am going with a vented furnace this time so in order to vent horizontally, it will go through brick. Not zesty and makes me uncomfortable.
I don't have the experience or skill for either of those, and it would require lots of pipe cutting and threading which I don't have the tools for, so I am hiring one of my brother's friends to do it. Union guy looking for side work because of this crappy economy. $1325 for the 45k furnace, supplies and installation. (a little less than half for labor). After thinking about it, I decided it's well worth it to me to have it done so quickly and done right.
So, did any of you horizontally vent your garage furnace? Have any pics you can share of how it looks outside of the building?
Thanks in advance,
-Ed
This is accomplished with a simple statement on the equipment or installation manual stating something like: "This appliance is category I when vented horizontally". Since it's category I when horizontally vented you can use any category I vent system which includes B vent. And it will typically pass pass inspection. I believe some of the manufactures are getting away from this and now require a category III vent system.