Running Furnace Fan...creating neg pressure in house?

Joined
23 Nov 2006
Messages
3
Reaction score
0
Country
United Kingdom
I have a basic question: On my forced air gas furnace, if I run the fan alone (no heat), does it force some of my house air out of the chimney? Or would there be a damper stopping this from happening?
Thanks.
 
Sponsored Links
If it was a gas boiler in the UK (this is a UK site) you would have to have fresh-air-in ventilation for such a boiler, of a size that could supply it without needing to suck air from the house, and so could not create negative pressure.

this is usually a hole in the adjacent wall, but sometimes ducts are used (this prevents draughts)
 
Okay, I'll try the other link; thanks. My situation is the same as in the U.K., though. I have a fresh-air intake near the furnace, but I'm experiencing some problems I think may have to do with negative pressure. Is there an easy way to test whether you have negative pressure in your house, or do you have to guess by the way your appliances are acting?
 
Sponsored Links
We have defined Air aperture sizes for each boiler; calculated so that the suction won't occur (I believe the reason is so that inadequate airflow won't cause poor combustion and possible CO fumes into the house)

I would have thought your manufacturer would have a table of sizes for boilers, possibly a current model of equivalent rating if yours is old.
If you have neg pressure you would notice it by cold air rushing in through any gaps or holes, e.g. round the doors, even when there is no wind on that side.

There is always a slight upwards flow, due to heating convection, inside a building, and you may have warm air escaping into the roof space.
 
Yes, my attic hatch-cover is allowing warm air to leak out of the upstairs. I just discovered that with a stick of incense. There is a bathroom fan up there as well. I'll seal them both up and see if it helps the situation. This fresh-air intake in the basement is a real problem, though. I'd like to keep it plugged because it lets in so much cold air that you need to wear winter clothes down here. Doesn't seem logical: I bought a new higher-efficiency furnace, then had to let the winter into my basement in order to run it. Should have stuck with my old model and saved a bunch of money.

Thanks for your help, though. Appreciate it.
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Back
Top