Hello,
our ventilation system for our house is currently being planned. Is it necessary to plan the same number of supply air vents as exhaust air vents?
Is there a guideline for how many supply air vents are needed, for example one supply vent per 30 cubic meters of room volume?
What about the walk-in closet and the hallway downstairs and upstairs?
Best regards
Sabine
our ventilation system for our house is currently being planned. Is it necessary to plan the same number of supply air vents as exhaust air vents?
Is there a guideline for how many supply air vents are needed, for example one supply vent per 30 cubic meters of room volume?
What about the walk-in closet and the hallway downstairs and upstairs?
Best regards
Sabine
Bieber0815 schrieb:
There are two supply air vents and one exhaust vent in our open living-dining-kitchen area. It’s the same in our house with a similar room size.
D
daniels8712 Feb 2017 10:10Our open kitchen/dining/living area has three supply air inlets and exhaust air in the utility room, bathroom, and kitchen. On the upper floor, there is exhaust air in the bathroom and the open staircase area, with supply air in both children's rooms, the bedroom, and the dressing room.
However, a general comparison is not very helpful, as it always depends on the floor plan.
However, a general comparison is not very helpful, as it always depends on the floor plan.
D
daniels8712 Feb 2017 11:11The kitchen, living/dining area, and stairwell are completely open, totaling about 60 m² (645 ft²), I believe.
Curly schrieb:
Our home construction company initially created a plan for us. According to this, the living area gets 2 intake air vents and the open kitchen gets 1 exhaust air vent. The room is a total of 60m² (645 sq ft), and I’m not sure if 2 intake vents are enough.It’s the same for us. Room size about 50m² (538 sq ft)
BUT:
Each air inlet and outlet has 2 connection ports. And where necessary, all of them are connected. So basically, we have 4 intake air ducts in the living/dining room and 2 exhaust ducts in the kitchen.
I would like to share a quick note here, even though it’s slightly off-topic:
Whenever possible, choose the largest possible diameter for the duct system – usually, there are two common options (DN 63/52 or DN 75/63).
With a smaller diameter, the likelihood of noise issues at the ventilation outlets increases.
Best regards
xray
Whenever possible, choose the largest possible diameter for the duct system – usually, there are two common options (DN 63/52 or DN 75/63).
With a smaller diameter, the likelihood of noise issues at the ventilation outlets increases.
Best regards
xray
Similar topics