ᐅ Is my central mechanical ventilation system working correctly?
Created on: 26 Jul 2019 09:55
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bernieHello everyone,
I have a question regarding the mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (Westaflex, central system with heat recovery and bypass function):
Indoors (exhaust air temperature 24°C (75°F))
Outdoors 35°C (95°F)
Setpoint room temperature 20°C (68°F)
With these values, the hot outside air should actually pass through the heat exchanger to be cooled by the "only" 24°C (75°F) exhaust air. However, the hot outside air bypasses the heat exchanger instead: the bypass damper is active.
How is it working for you?
I have a question regarding the mechanical ventilation with heat recovery (Westaflex, central system with heat recovery and bypass function):
Indoors (exhaust air temperature 24°C (75°F))
Outdoors 35°C (95°F)
Setpoint room temperature 20°C (68°F)
With these values, the hot outside air should actually pass through the heat exchanger to be cooled by the "only" 24°C (75°F) exhaust air. However, the hot outside air bypasses the heat exchanger instead: the bypass damper is active.
How is it working for you?
Mycraft schrieb:
"Cooling" through the heat exchanger is something you can forget about. It’s just a marketing gimmick.I understand that, but it’s definitely better than blowing in air at 35°C (95°F) directly. *Edit* I just realized I created my thread in the wrong subforum --> please move it to Controlled Residential Ventilation with Heat Recovery, THANK YOU!
seat88 schrieb:
If you try to cool outside air at 35°C (95°F) down to your indoor temperature of 24°C (75°F), you won’t be able to maintain 24°C (75°F) inside for long. Because your indoor air is limited... Currently, 24°C (75°F) air is going directly outside, and 35°C (95°F) air is coming in uncooled (without passing through the heat exchanger). This option is even worse. The ventilation system is not turned off; it runs 24/7.
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boxandroof26 Jul 2019 13:00If I understand correctly, the bypass of your mechanical ventilation with heat recovery should be able to switch automatically. This means something is not working: it might be stuck, incorrectly connected, poor control, or a faulty sensor.
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