chris vis
07-20-2015, 06:19 AM
31984319853198631987
I wanted to know others thoughts on this furnace intake/exhaust pvc installation.
It is located next to a gas hot water tank in a basement area side room with two louvered doors. I have never seen anyone enter the chimney with a corrugated sleeve for hot water exhaust AND a pvc exhaust and go straight up to the roof (see photos 2 and 3). The other concern is photo 4 where the intake is just stopped on the other side of the furnace and not to outside air (see elbow in photo 4).
While I know this intake might be allowable as long as there is combustion requirements met for the other gas appliance, doesn't this just cause negative pressure and negate the efficiency of a high efficiency furnace by sucking hot/cold air into the home through depressurization?
Does this even remotely seem right to anyone besides the factors of inefficiency created by loss of conditioned air through exhaust? How does anyone really know if the depressurization caused will not draw flue gases out of the hot water tank? I am writing this up under inefficiency of interior intake and possible exhaust gas draw from hot water tank flue, but what else would anyone add?
I do not know how to figure out NFPA ANSI code combustible requirements etc, but those are my two concerns. Anyone have anything different?
I wanted to know others thoughts on this furnace intake/exhaust pvc installation.
It is located next to a gas hot water tank in a basement area side room with two louvered doors. I have never seen anyone enter the chimney with a corrugated sleeve for hot water exhaust AND a pvc exhaust and go straight up to the roof (see photos 2 and 3). The other concern is photo 4 where the intake is just stopped on the other side of the furnace and not to outside air (see elbow in photo 4).
While I know this intake might be allowable as long as there is combustion requirements met for the other gas appliance, doesn't this just cause negative pressure and negate the efficiency of a high efficiency furnace by sucking hot/cold air into the home through depressurization?
Does this even remotely seem right to anyone besides the factors of inefficiency created by loss of conditioned air through exhaust? How does anyone really know if the depressurization caused will not draw flue gases out of the hot water tank? I am writing this up under inefficiency of interior intake and possible exhaust gas draw from hot water tank flue, but what else would anyone add?
I do not know how to figure out NFPA ANSI code combustible requirements etc, but those are my two concerns. Anyone have anything different?