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Ventilation in Kitchens & Bathrooms
By Mike Holmes
Mike’s Advice / Home Safety & Maintenance
Monday, September 23rd, 2019 @ 11:21am
The Importance of Ventilation In Your Home
The quality of your indoor air is important. One way to keep it healthy is to ventilate the moist air and odors created in kitchens and bathrooms. Home ventilation is important in all homes, but especially in newer construction, since new homes are built to have good insulation and tight air seals that prevent air movement.
I always say nothing lasts forever unless you make sure it does, and that includes your house. As a homeowner, you need to understand the importance of exhaust fans and proper ventilation and how to properly install and operate them. This is key for removing excess moisture from your indoor air, and we all know that moisture can lead to mold. Effective ventilation ensures that you have good indoor air quality.
A lot of people don’t realize that a home’s ventilation system plays a huge role in its durability. Think of the HVAC system as your home’s lungs–clean efficient airflow is essential to maintain its health. Proper airflow can help prevent mold, which causes extensive damage in a short amount of time. But even more important is the role ventilation plays in your family’s health. When the majority of our day is spent indoors, air quality becomes an even more important issue for the people living in the home.
Here’s what you need to know about ventilation fans in your kitchen and bath:
Kitchen Exhaust Fans
Delicious aromas may be part of good cooking, but we don’t always want the odors from one meal to linger around until the next, or for them to spread further into additional living areas. Also, moisture—which is potentially very damaging– grease, heat and even carbon monoxide from gas range combustion can be dangerous.
You can ensure that fresh air is circulating around you by use of kitchen exhaust fan. It removes particles, smoke, carcinogens, and odors from your indoor air.
Which is better range hood or exhaust fan?
In my opinion, hood fans that exhaust back into the house—even if they are filtered—have limited effectiveness. They don’t really take the heat and moisture or cooking odours anywhere—they just move it around.
Choosing Your Kitchen Fan
A kitchen range hood moves more air than a bathroom fan and they tend to be louder depending on the speed they are set to. Usually, an average size range requires air removal at the rate of 120 CFM when using an overhead vent hood.
But be careful not to overdo it–high-capacity exhaust fans and range top fans can cause chimney ‘backdrafting’. This occurs when air is drawn down into the chimneys, potentially bringing dangerous combustion exhaust gases into the house. If you have these high-draw fans you will need a matching supply-air fan to balance house pressure.
Don’t forget that you also want to you pick a fan with the right duct size. A hood for minimum extraction in most kitchens should have at least a six-inch sized duct exhaust. The hood should also be flexible enough to connect the dust work on the top or the rear of the unit.
Where should an exhaust fan be located in a kitchen?
Your exhaust fan is usually directly over the kitchen stove and is installed in a range hood or cabinet,. It can also be integrated with a microwave oven, or mounted on the wall. The fan should be ducted to exhaust outside of the home, not into the attic, crawlspace, or another area inside the building.
Bathroom Exhaust Fans and Ventilation
Bathrooms create odours too, but the moisture they can generate is potentially far more serious, since the average shower produces an enormous amount of water vapour and steam. If that warm, wet air isn’t properly vented, it will find its way into your walls and ceilings and cause a lot of problems.
Not sure if your current bathroom fan is doing its job? You can test your fan’s strength by holding a tissue up to it when it’s on. If the fan’s suction will hold the tissue in place, it’s fine—if not, replace the fan.
Why You Need a Bathroom Fan
A bathroom fan will improve comfort and helps protect your home from mold and moisture damage. The moist air produced from a bath or shower can accumulate on your bathroom surfaces. Without giving the bathroom the ventilation system it needs, you are asking for rot and peeling paint and providing a good environment for mold and mildew growth. A properly installed bathroom fan provides ventilation, drawing humid air and odors out of the home.
Choosing Your Bathroom Fan
You need to consider the size of your room to determine the cubic feet per minute (CFM) rating of the fan. The CFM rating measures the volume of air the fan moves. If you end up buying a fan that’s too small, it will not be effective in removing moisture from the air. For bathrooms up to 100 square feet in size, you should have an exhaust fan provide a minimum of 1 cubic foot per minute (CFM) per square foot of floor space. I’d go higher—especially in a larger bathroom, or one with several fixtures or a jetted bathtub.
When looking for a bathroom fan, look for ENERGY STAR® ventilation options that help you design beyond code. You know I am not a minimum code kind of guy!
Ceiling-mount bathroom connect to an exhaust duct that runs through the attic or between floors. These are the most common types of fans.
Wall-mount bathroom fans are designed for rooms where venting through the ceiling isn’t doable. These fans typically vent directly through the wall to the outside with little or no exhaust ductwork. Some fans will work in either a ceiling- or wall-mount installation.
How Long Should I Run My Bathroom Fan For?
After your shower, make sure you run that exhaust fan for 30 minutes or so. Don’t make the mistake of just running it for a few minutes and thinking the job is done. Also, you need to keep the door or a window open a bit when the fan is running. If the bathroom is sealed while the fan is on, there is not enough air present to draw air and properly exchange it—and the fan can’t push the moist air outside. If the airflow in your bathroom is restricted, your fan’s power will be reduced significantly.
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Venting Into The Attic?
Whatever you do, don’t vent your fans into the attic—they need to exhaust directly outside. The moisture and heat will help create the perfect conditions for mould to grow—and to grow quickly. I’ve seen the damage that can result from ventilation fans releasing air into attics, walls or ceilings, or roof soffits. It causes rot that can destroy your home’s structure.
Ducting for Your Ventilation Needs
Make sure your contractor installs the fan so the ducting has as short and straight a run to the outside as possible, so the fan works more efficiently. If the exhaust duct has to turn or go a long distance, you might want to consider a fan with a larger capacity.
The best exhaust paths are made using solid, smooth ducting—not ribbed or flexible which impede air flow. And, where the ducting runs through unheated spaces, you have to make sure they are properly sealed at every seam, and insulated. Without it, the cold air surrounding the ductwork will cause condensation and leaks.
Maintenance for Your Exhaust Fans
You should clean your exhaust fans twice a year. Just remove the cover and check it for dust build-up.
Leave The Exhaust On
Let the fan do its job! Many people don’t leave on their fans long enough for them to be effective. It’s recommended they be left on for 20 or 30 minutes after the source of the pollution has been eliminated. Better yet, get one on a timer so you don’t have to remember.
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