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Cold air returns

Reit38

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Nov 12, 2011
Messages
626
Location
Iowa
I have one air return centrally located in the center of my house. My house is a split level. You come in the and either goto basement or the upstairs (main level)It's at the end of the hallway where my living room begins. Behind the wall where the return is, is my dining/kitchen. This area is always a temperature difference from rest of the house. My question is, can I add another vent in the dining room directly behind the vent in the hallway. Or by doin this will it change pressures on the hvac and have to have someone come out

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kwschumm

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Feb 13, 2016
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Olympia, WA
Warning, I am not an HVAC engineer. That said, the returns are on the suction side of the system. Unless the return is undersized I doubt it will have much effect on the system to add another return.
 

DC73

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Dec 27, 2014
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Location
Lubbock TX
can I add another vent in the dining room directly behind the vent in the hallway.

Shouldn't be a problem. Just make sure the new return air vent allows air to pass through the existing filter or install a new grille with a separate filter.

I'm assuming your kitchen/dining is too warm in the summer and colder in the winter. If adding an extra return air intake doesn't bring the room temperature to where you want it to be, you might have to increase the size of the supply duct(s) to the kitchen/dining area.

DC
 

75gmck25

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Jul 21, 2014
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1,318
Location
Alexandria, VA
In general, more air returns should make the system circulate air better into any room that has a return. The air total flow is limited by the large plenum where the main filter is located, so the HVAC operates the same.

In some areas it is common to have one or two large returns in the middle of the house (maybe one upstairs and one downstairs), and additional smaller returns in each bedroom or other area that may be shut off from the main part of the house. This ensures good circulation of air to all rooms when interior doors are shut.

Bruce
 

DC73

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Dec 27, 2014
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Lubbock TX
In some areas it is common to have one or two large returns in the middle of the house (maybe one upstairs and one downstairs), and additional smaller returns in each bedroom or other area that may be shut off from the main part of the house. This ensures good circulation of air to all rooms when interior doors are shut.

I have 3 central returns in my house but individual rooms had none. I improved my situation quite a bit by adding return air pathways to the bedroom doors. Like these:

Door_rap_1x1.jpg


http://www.tamtech.com/Perfect-Balance-In-Door-Return-Air-Pathway_p_105.html

DC
 
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73fxe

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Jun 11, 2016
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308
Location
SW. Michigan
On a split level house the cold air settles in the lower level. If You can bring some returns down to the floor in the lower level it will make it feel warmer in the winter.
 

Fixin'Stuff

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Jun 14, 2016
Messages
584
Location
HotterNHellHouston
Keep in mind that adding a vent to a door or even cutting an inch off the bottom will let more noise into the room. It can be tough to take a nap if you can hear everything else going on in the house. :(

Where I have access, I add filtered returns to every room. It makes a huge difference in comfort and "almost-closed" doors no longer slam themselves shut when the a/c kicks on. Tough to do this on the first floor of a 2-story house though.

Since the price difference is pretty low on the filter grilles and the filters themselves seem to cost the same regardless of size, I like to use larger filters. With the increased surface area (and far less total airflow at each filter than with a single return) I've found that I can often wait a year between filter changes in those rooms. :eek: Even then they aren't very dusty.
 

yeldogt

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Jan 2, 2012
Messages
18,184
Make sure it's a return issue and not a supply issue -- if the kitchen and dining are open to the rest of the house ... it's a supply problem. I can't tell from you post.

That's not to say you can't fix some issues in an open space with another return -- the return will pull air from other parts of the house. Ideally you want both.

Splits are difficult -- you need more return in the lower level when its cold out and in the summer the upper levels need more ... but still need good returns on the lower. Some have an upper with a damper.

In both summer and winter the cold air will fall to the basement.
 
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