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Hi have a highest house,the downstairs is hot,will installing wall exhaust vents cool house down
Hello @awagner
Welcome to the Bunnings Workshop community. It's fantastic to have you join us, and thank you for sharing your question about venting your house to cool it down.
There are a few things to consider when venting your house, but before I make any recommendations, would it be possible for you to post a photo of your house? This will give our members an idea of how your house is built. We can then make recommendations on how to properly ventilate your home.
Moving the hot air out of your home is always a plus. This means that you won't have to continuously use your air condition system and using a standard electric fan will suffice.
If you need a hand posting the pictures, please let us know.
Eric
Hi @awagner
To answer your question exhaust fans will work pumping heat out but air must be pulled in from outside some where else in the house and that could be hot air from outside. But if you clever you can install air vent on the cool side of the house let cooler air come in. Some smart houses pull air from under the house or a basement where temperature is cooler and near constant.
You could use Air con is best as it is a closed system in your house many wall units are very economical these days if used at peak hot time and not 24/7, make sure it uses inverter technology as this saves power use.
Also a dc powered ceiling fan can be told to spin air up or downwards this left on all day will mix the air in the room and the room will feel cooler ie no hot roof air layer. They are very economical in power use especially on low speed. I find hot air rises to the roof heating the roof materials and even after you turn a fan on the roof remains heated and quite warm for a few hours the trick is to stop roof materials warming up.
I have bathrooms with tile from floor to ceiling that acts as hot or cold thermal storage in summer the cold tiles overnight stay cool until late in the day leaving the 2 bathroom doors open helps cool indoor air, in winter we close the doors. I should consider heating the tiles with sunlight some how then winter time open the house to warm air. This works not to a huge degree but enough to take some heat out of the house as colder air rolls across floor then mixes with upper air via fan.
Another way to start thinking about solving your problem is find ways to stop the heat going in that way you may not need a lot of power to cool your home.
Plant bushes and or trees or pot plants on wheels on the hot side of your house. Things like a grape vine on a pergola type structure works well as summer the leaves are very cool and shady and winter all the leafs fall off for winter sun warming of your house. My first grape vine i grew on wires across my house side and the windows that was a huge heat reduction.
Put solar film on your windows and doors.
Use blinds to stop the heat. I am looking at electric blinds I can automate for different season changes (Just my pipe dream still)
Use a pelmet over the window as this stops heat and cold on the outside of the blind from starting to form a convection current in your room.
Some security shutters are more insulated than others by personally i think they over rate at insulation still only block 15% in my opinion and window still can be warm as they are made from aluminium and the sun heats them and between the shutter and window convection and some secondary radient heat still hits the windows and they feel warm mid summer.
Another couple of rooms I sewed on a silver lining like a flexible silver polyester that worked well. They use light weight mylar in space craft hulls thats where i got that idea combine with a pelmet is 80% heat block out. Maybe we could get NASA showing us a couple projects in here lol
Well down stairs the only other way is sun hitting you bricks and heating them by the end of a hot day. All you can do is shade walls I don't know if expanding foam would work between gyprock and outer bricks or double brick I would hire a company to do that any how if such a thing exists.
Solving heat problems is tricky and may take a few steps I just wish they build all houses to new standards so we don't have to worry about any of this.
Project time line could be
Air con or ceiling fan or both I use fans mostly and air-con on super hot nights only., greenery outside and window foil ( the silver or gold reflecting type is best think astronauts gold helmet visor it works well.)
Hi @awagner,
I don't want to come across as some sort of an idiot, but do you have windows on the downstairs part of the house that you could open to let
natural air convection occur, through the whole downstairs floor?
Hi @MikeTNZ
Mike what you say makes perfect sense and is the best solution that air flow would help greatly. :0)
I cant speak for @awagner but sadly for the most part in Australia windows need to be locked or locked partly open. Or in mid summer the air is hotter on the outside than inside in my region.
Quite often houses have older alarm systems and the air movement on cheap alarms can set them off with curtain movement too these days camera systems replace alarm systems and they are better depending on brand.
Hi @Jewelleryrescue,
Those are some very good points you've made there, I didn't really think my post through before submitting it.
I can totally agree with you about the outside temperature being higher than the inside temperature, I lived in Alice Springs for a couple of years as
an electrical technician in the mines, that heat is soul-destroying.
When I returned to New Zealand, I felt cold for the next 6 months.
Cheers,
Mike T.
Hello @awagner
It's great that you've received fantastic recommendations from @Jewelleryrescue and @MikeTNZ. While we are waiting for your photos, I suggest having a look at the Deta 250mm Side Duct Exhaust Fan. This is a side ducted fan which means that you can install it right in the middle of your ceiling to maximize air removal. Combined with a Pacific Air 125mm PVC Air Grille Vent positioned on the shaded part of your house, you should get good air circulation.
Please let me know if you need hand posting your photos.
Eric
All good @MikeTNZ dont sweat the post pardon my pun you spoke your mind and that what this forums for a collecting of ideas.
Wow the mines at Alice Springs it cant get much more hotter than that, I dont know how you survived ?. I would have being sitting in front of air con a meter away. lol
Hi @Jewelleryrescue,
To be fair, coming from New Zealand it was terrible, but being so far underground during the day, it was quite cold.
During Summer, it would be something like 8 -11 degrees underground, as you came back up the worker lift at the end of your shift,
it would get warmer and warmer until you got to the top, bright sunlight and a temperature of anywhere from 38 to 48 degrees.
A very dry heat too, one thing I learned very early on was you drank water, don't go to the pub and drink the cold 5+ % beer.
Or you would wake up sometime later in a drunken stupor outside the pub.
Ha Ha Ha
HI @MikeTNZ
I am strangely surprised I know undergound is cooler but i had it in my mind a mine is hot and sweaty place lol Maybe they just working to hard or hung over from the pub you mentioned. What you dont like dogs licking your face to wake you up outside lol
Yeah that 5% plus beer will sneak up on you. I made some 6% ginger beer once as measued by a hydrometer and a mate of mine likes his rum at approx 32% so rum and regular ginger beer is a quite tasty drink "called dark and stormy" He took 4 bottles of mine home.
But he didnt factor in mixer ginger beer was loaded too (I warned him ) they found him in his garden the next day crawling along fertilizing the plants. (being sick) he was a mess and could not go to work. I renamed the drink " Zombie rum" I gave the last bottles to a visiting pain in #$%^$ inlaw apparently it cure him of drinking lol. Not that the drink was bad I had some of the same batch just beware of the kick.
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