ᐅ Insulating a Kitchen Exhaust (Chimney Effect) with Mineral Wool?
Created on: 1 Nov 2016 12:43
M
markus2703
Hello, I would like to ask for a brief collection of ideas regarding the following issue:
We had a ducted exhaust hood installed, which vents the air through the roof. The kitchen is now installed, and it appears more and more that a chimney effect is occurring, meaning that cold outside air is entering the living space as if through an open window.
There are supposedly check valves, but the duct can only be accessed by removing the hood (which is difficult).
I had the idea of inserting insulation material (wool). This is technically possible. Is this feasible, or can anyone advise against it?
Any other ideas?
We had a ducted exhaust hood installed, which vents the air through the roof. The kitchen is now installed, and it appears more and more that a chimney effect is occurring, meaning that cold outside air is entering the living space as if through an open window.
There are supposedly check valves, but the duct can only be accessed by removing the hood (which is difficult).
I had the idea of inserting insulation material (wool). This is technically possible. Is this feasible, or can anyone advise against it?
Any other ideas?
Steffi33 schrieb:
Hello, we had exactly the same problem back then (15 years ago). We also installed a check valve in the pipe. This has effectively solved the problem up to now. Best regards, Steffi.Thank you, we will do the same accordingly!
Update: A backflow flap has been installed. The problem is actually solved.
I installed the flap directly at the ceiling of the first floor, and the pipe is insulated above it.
I installed the flap directly at the ceiling of the first floor, and the pipe is insulated above it.