andyvh1959
Well-known member
I remodeled our main bath in 2018, which included replacing a sunken tub with a tub/shower combo. So my wife daily uses the shower and turns on the vent fan to reduce mirror fogging. Over time the ceiling around the fan in one direction starting peeling/flaking, so more repairs for me. Should say I've been in the house since 2002 and had no prior ceiling issues in the bathroom. So I assumed the ceiling fan was never properly vented.
Dug around in the attic above the bedrooms today and found there is ducting, about 18' long from the ceiling fan to the east roof eave vent. I ran a camera cable into the duct from the fan and found nothing but a bit of dust as far as I could reach in, about 14', no evidence of the ducting being rusted out. So I'm assuming the outlet end of the ducting is blocked with debris. So my next project is to remove enough ducting in the attic to confirm if the end of the duct need to be cleared to actually venting out the eave (note, I'm in Green Bay, typical Wisconsin winter weather). I can access most of the ducting except for about 8' that routes through a finished ceiiing of the bathroom, hallway and bedroom.
Assuming the end of the duct is blocked, so the fan vented out the less resistance gap in the ducting, which caused the bathroom ceiling plaster damage. Once I confirm the duct is cleared I may have to bust out a section of the bathroom ceiling to replace some ducting. Or, if there is a liner I can install into the ducting, like a thinwall plastic tube, I may avoid having to break open the ceiling.
Dug around in the attic above the bedrooms today and found there is ducting, about 18' long from the ceiling fan to the east roof eave vent. I ran a camera cable into the duct from the fan and found nothing but a bit of dust as far as I could reach in, about 14', no evidence of the ducting being rusted out. So I'm assuming the outlet end of the ducting is blocked with debris. So my next project is to remove enough ducting in the attic to confirm if the end of the duct need to be cleared to actually venting out the eave (note, I'm in Green Bay, typical Wisconsin winter weather). I can access most of the ducting except for about 8' that routes through a finished ceiiing of the bathroom, hallway and bedroom.
Assuming the end of the duct is blocked, so the fan vented out the less resistance gap in the ducting, which caused the bathroom ceiling plaster damage. Once I confirm the duct is cleared I may have to bust out a section of the bathroom ceiling to replace some ducting. Or, if there is a liner I can install into the ducting, like a thinwall plastic tube, I may avoid having to break open the ceiling.

