Green Building Bible, Fourth Edition |
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These two books are the perfect starting place to help you get to grips with one of the most vitally important aspects of our society - our homes and living environment. PLEASE NOTE: A download link for Volume 1 will be sent to you by email and Volume 2 will be sent to you by post as a book. |
Vanilla 1.0.3 is a product of Lussumo. More Information: Documentation, Community Support.
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Posted By: barneyIdeally they want to be on the same face, but with a sensible height differential. The fan power is small and it's easy to unbalance the whole system (or even reverse it) in even mild wind conditions.This is a very good point. Its not just underventilation we need to worry about. If the MVHR flows are unbalanced then the heat recovery efficiency will be reduced proportionately.
Posted By: barneyAs a very broad RoT, at least 1m vertical displacement between supply and extract with the extract at the higher point and up to 10m seperation between inlet an outlet with a further 2m from any boiler flue discharges, dirty extract discharges, S&V terminals etc.Have you found any references for this? I couldn't find any.
Posted By: barneyWell the height differential is just simple physiscs - if you can get a stack effect going on the fan power reduces - so that takes care of why the exhaust is ideally higher than the inlet, plus of course your initial post covers the type of air that's being discharged - ie more humid and warmer than inlet.
Posted By: beelbeebubSnow
My inlet and outlet are about 18" above the tile line with a "mushroom" rain cap. During the last snowfall my inlet was just above the surface on the up slope side, if we'd had a couple more inches I'd have had to clear around it (luckily my inlet is next to a velux so no problem).
The exhaust kept clear by melting the snow around it.
Posted By: borpinI also have a Soil Vent pipe to worry about but my intention is to take this down once we have completion and replace it with a durgo! It is totally superfluous.You will need one soil vent pipe to deal with positive sewer pressure caused by discharges from higher properties. However, this soil vent pipe doesn't need to be connected to your internal soil stacks, it can be totally outside your thermal envelope.
Posted By: davidfreeboroughYou will need one soil vent pipe to deal with positive sewer pressure caused by discharges from higher properties. However, this soil vent pipe doesn't need to be connected to your internal soil stacks, it can be totally outside your thermal envelope.
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