Why does it step up? Is that crawl space under there?That’s the wall we are going to take out. Kitchen is on the other side of it. The closet looking room there is a formal dining room. It’s bigger than it looks. 10x26. We are going to take it in on one end to make a pantry.
the closet looking room has huge return air vents. I have them 3/4 blocked so it pulls out of the hall by the bedrooms. That fixed my heater /AC distribution issue I had before.
there is easy access to the wall in the addition opposite the fireplace, but I’d assume it’s a lot farther than optimal.
Yes, that’s where the original house starts.Why does it step up? Is that crawl space under there?
Yes I could easily add another duct. I just thought back there would be too far to do good with. Would you push or pull from there?Are those two returns on the wall higher than the ceiling in the dining room, as in can you see them in the attic? If so, all you have to do is add another one in the middle to connect the new insulated flex duct and run it to wherever you want to run it through the attic, just like I did. My vent is in the ceiling, yours would be on the wall.
Pull, since there’s tons of wasted heat up there and the bedrooms are so far away.Yes I could easily add another duct. I just thought back there would be too far to do good with. Would you push or pull from there?
Easy enough. I’ll try it.I would put this right between those 2 returns in the wall if the studs are 16” on center.
https://www.amazon.com/Square-Round-Transition-14x14-square/dp/B01DLDARIC
Run 8 inch insulated flex ducting to a quality in-line duct fan with plenty of CFM, control the flow with a rheostat or a thermostatically controlled switch, continue on with the insulated ducting and add whatever registers in the ceilings of whatever cold rooms you want to.
You would be done in a day or two including the electric.
Easy enough. I’ll try it.
I had the same thought but I’m under the impression the bedrooms are a different zone than that room. Maybe I’m misunderstanding and they are not.I like Short Timers idea.
It occured to me that those two return air ducts if enlarged and the other return opening in the other room were to be closed off, then your AC circulation system could be utilized. A high return is good for AC as it draws the warmest air out. The high returns also work good for moving the wood stove heat around due to their being high and in the same room as the wood stove. Once the wood stove heat gets into the ductwork it gets distributed through the house.
That’s right, 2 units. One does the big room and the other does the rest of the house.I had the same thought but I’m under the impression the bedrooms are a different zone than that room. Maybe I’m misunderstanding and they are not.
As in he has two electric forced hot air furnaces and two A/C units and separate ducting. I could very well be way off on this assumption.
Not to be rude, but your posts are causing a lot of confusion for me, I’m trying to decipher your current setup and feel I’m making a lot of assumptions, and I believe I’m not the only one.That’s right, 2 units. One does the big room and the other does the rest of the house.
So I prefer to just snuggle, but the wife does not. House is 100% electric, 2 units, 2500sqft. Do y’all think that’s an option to buy a pellet/corn stove and run it on a thermostat in my bedroom? Room is 20x15 other bedrooms are smaller and down the hall. I’d burn all corn, not interesting in buying pellets. I could probably plant 3 acres and feed my freezer beefs, bait a few deer and run that heater all winter.
No codes here. I can add a carbon monoxide detector to the room if needed.
A friend of mine had a pellet stove in his shop that was just vented out the wall like a dryer kinda. Is that right? Do you even need anything under it? You’d think since it’s all contained I wouldn’t need any tile or anything under it. Floor is hard wood.
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