Markfothebeast
Well-known member
- Joined
- Jul 29, 2016
- Messages
- 419
Not related to a garage but rather our furnace room. I've been battling the furnace room since I moved in. The tight angle of the water heater draft exhaust has been causing the exhaust to get backdraft upstairs when the air condition unit is on. It sets off the smoke alarm but not the Carbon monoxide detector for some dumb reason.
The furnace exhaust and draft vent were on a tee which was blowing furnace exhaust at the w/h draft. After ****** knuckles and busting through cinder block I was able to replace the tee with a wye. Now when the furnace is running it aids in pulling the w/h draft exhaust up. However, I moved the water heater as close as safely possible to put in a flexible draft vent pipe which is still improperly angled and impossible to properly angle. The w/h no longer backdrafts unless the A/C is on.
The furnace room is in the basement and is enclosed with cinder block walls on 3 sides and a 2x4 wall on one. The basement ceiling is a steel frame (mobile home chassis) with a drop ceiling in all rooms but the furnace room. The backdrafting floats over the drop ceiling and makes its way up the stairs.
Our LPG furnace and w/h both draw combustion air from the home. Is it at all possible to seal off the furnace room and cut a combustion air vent into the exterior cinder block wall to allow cool air to be drawn in instead of sucking in recycled air (and possibly pull air from doors/windows/etc)?
*Photos coming soon
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk
The furnace exhaust and draft vent were on a tee which was blowing furnace exhaust at the w/h draft. After ****** knuckles and busting through cinder block I was able to replace the tee with a wye. Now when the furnace is running it aids in pulling the w/h draft exhaust up. However, I moved the water heater as close as safely possible to put in a flexible draft vent pipe which is still improperly angled and impossible to properly angle. The w/h no longer backdrafts unless the A/C is on.
The furnace room is in the basement and is enclosed with cinder block walls on 3 sides and a 2x4 wall on one. The basement ceiling is a steel frame (mobile home chassis) with a drop ceiling in all rooms but the furnace room. The backdrafting floats over the drop ceiling and makes its way up the stairs.
Our LPG furnace and w/h both draw combustion air from the home. Is it at all possible to seal off the furnace room and cut a combustion air vent into the exterior cinder block wall to allow cool air to be drawn in instead of sucking in recycled air (and possibly pull air from doors/windows/etc)?
*Photos coming soon
Sent from my SM-G920V using Tapatalk