[Greenbuilding] Natural ventilation.

Michael O'Brien obrien at hevanet.com
Tue Aug 30 20:31:40 CDT 2011


Hi, Frank--

If you accept the ASHRAE whole-house ventilation rate, you can easily provide it with a 4" vent in a small house. For example a 3-bedroom 2000 SF house is recommended to have 60 cfm ventilation capacity in Standard 62.2.

I believe that this rate is fine for houses which have been built using safe non-toxic materials and have low to normal moisture loads.

Best,

Mike O'Brien


On Aug 30, 2011, at 6:19 PM, Frank Tettemer wrote:

> Frank King, writing in "Ventilation", is correct:
> Air once breathed has reduced food value.  And ingesting it reduces ones' sustaining power.
> So fresh air is truly what we need.
> Thanks for that info, Rob.  Priceless, really.
> 
> And thanks, Mike, for the link to Duro Dyne.  I think I can make use of their spring loaded 4" damper, for the Summer months.
> 
> Admittedly, Alan, the volume of air exchange won't be huge.  But in the compact, well-sealed home we're building for the Cool Hemp folks, a steady night-time/day-time trickle of "pure, free air of field and forest" through a 4" opening, both in and out, should make some sort of difference.  Of course an opening skylight of 2 foot by 3 foot would be much better at air exchange.  But as Rob Tom has said,  I'm cringing and I am tempted to say "Gggggnnnaaaah!"
> 
> A four inch pipe is pretty insignificant, in the big scheme of things.   But it's better than nothing at all, and it takes double advantage of the required 4" combustion air supply, during the few non-wood-burning months we get in this climate.
> 
> (That's a pretty funny appellation, Alan.
> "Tar Sand Nation" also makes me cringe.)
> 
> Frank
> 
> Frank Tettemer
> Living Sol ~ Building and Design
> www.livingsol.com
> 613 756 3884
> 
> I suspect that fellow MooseHugger Frank, like I, cringed and uttered "Gggggnnnaaaah!" at warm-clime AA-man's suggestion to install a skylight.
> 
> Oh! The horror!
> ...in a well insulated house, where there ought to be little stratification in winter time, why would a skylight be any less energy efficient than a window of the same size and glazing quality?  Further, if it were strategically located and obtained some winter daytime gain, and or if the homeowner from Tar Sand Nation installed a two inch block of styrofoam in the opening from November to March, it might be a net asset, not to mention to provide the summer stack effect bonus.
> 
> AA
> 
> -- 
> 
> 
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