HVAC Handyman Style (part 3)
After getting the fan installed and wired, (see HVAC part 2 below) I was ready to start installing the ductwork for my air recirculation project. (I'm trying to re-route warm air from the rooms heated by a wood stove, to cooler locations in the house.)
In the first phase of the project, I cut holes in the master bedroom wall in preparation for the ducts and to determine the exact placement of the fan unit. Now it was time to cut outlet holes in the walls of the downstairs rooms where I'd be sending the recirculated air.
My strategy for cutting these outlets was to drill a couple of guide holes from behind the wall so that I would prevent cutting an opening an larger than I needed. I wanted to avoid doing any drywall patching. This meant snaking the drill into a couple of tight spaces but it turned out to be the right method as I was able to cut openings exactly to the size of the duct vents.
Routing the duct through the master bedroom floor and into the downstairs ceiling proved daunting. I was trying to work with the smallest hole possible in to save cutting away the floor unnecessarily, but I twice had to expand the size of the hole in order route the recirculation ducts around a heating duct from the basement furnace.
I also changed my plan from having the vents in the master bedroom (both recirculation and furnace heat) directing air vertically to directing air horizontally. This will allow us to make use of the space on top of the box that will house the vents.
The project is yet to be finished because I still need to construct the box that will hide the ductwork and in the master bedroom, but the recirculation of warm air in the house is going well. The rooms that aren't served by the wood stove are now getting a small shot of warm air. Before the recirculating fan and ducts were installed, when the temperature in the living room was 72 degrees fahrenheit, the other rooms would be six or eight degrees cooler. Now, they are consistently two or three degrees cooler. It's not a perfect solution, but with some tweaking of thermostat that turns the recirculating fan on and off and adjusting the louver that directs the air either to the master bedroom upstairs or the north rooms downstairs, I'll be able to even out the ambient air temperature throughout the house.

















