You should recommend insulated ducting as it's entering an unconditioned space (the loft). You'll get condensation forming on normal ducting and damp issues.
Informative video, I used one of these kits to fashion an extractor hood over my laser engraver. Saved me some money over buying a pricier pre-manufactured hood.
Useful video. I am adding two ensuite bathrooms adjacent to each other. Should I add two inline fans for each, or would one inline fan serve both if I split the ducting? Also I assume the wider the ducting, the faster it extracts?
Hi, has the ducting simply been cut to insert the backdraught shutter, and then secured with the clips? I already have this installed in my new build but without a backdraught shutter and I need to add one. Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks a lot
Please advice me, I had an inline extractor fan fitted and a roof tile vent but he has connected the inline fan to a normal extractor fan. So my bathroom has a celling extractor fan connected to an inline one in the roof. Is this ok or should he have just used a vent in the bathroom?
Hello, I have a better air duct fan. I'd like to invite you to review it. The samples are sent to you for free. Then can you help me make a 1-minute short-term review?
Great video. A question if I may: is insulated ducting worth the extra cost over the white plastic type you'd see used with a tumble dryer for example? We inherited two bathroom extractor fans in our house and one has an insulated hose and the other does not. I wondered about "upgrading" the non-insualted one but wasn't sure if it would actually make a difference.....or whether it would just be a placebo effect. If it makes any difference, the non insulated one (family bathroom) gets more use than the insulated one (en-suite)...
We had one that used semi rigid aluminium duct and it was really noisy. Replaced it with insulated acoustic duct and now you can't even hear it when it's on!
You should recommend insulated ducting as it's entering an unconditioned space (the loft). You'll get condensation forming on normal ducting and damp issues.
Always use insulated ducting. You'll get damp issues in the loft otherwise
Informative video, I used one of these kits to fashion an extractor hood over my laser engraver. Saved me some money over buying a pricier pre-manufactured hood.
Useful video. I am adding two ensuite bathrooms adjacent to each other. Should I add two inline fans for each, or would one inline fan serve both if I split the ducting? Also I assume the wider the ducting, the faster it extracts?
i would like to have seen the Roof Tile Vents, also what electricals typically used, eg humidistat, timer, etc.
Very helpful and simple to follow, thank you
How does this work? Is it connected to the light switch? Or can it be connected to light switch?
Why dont you answer peoples comments
Great video, Thanks
Shall we install in reverse direction mode for fresh air ventilation?
Thank you very much!
How far should be place the fan from extraction point to get maximum efficiency
Hi, has the ducting simply been cut to insert the backdraught shutter, and then secured with the clips? I already have this installed in my new build but without a backdraught shutter and I need to add one. Any help would be much appreciated. Thanks a lot
Please advice me, I had an inline extractor fan fitted and a roof tile vent but he has connected the inline fan to a normal extractor fan. So my bathroom has a celling extractor fan connected to an inline one in the roof. Is this ok or should he have just used a vent in the bathroom?
Hello, I have a better air duct fan. I'd like to invite you to review it. The samples are sent to you for free. Then can you help me make a 1-minute short-term review?
Would this work in a kitchen?? ✌️
Great video
Great video. A question if I may: is insulated ducting worth the extra cost over the white plastic type you'd see used with a tumble dryer for example? We inherited two bathroom extractor fans in our house and one has an insulated hose and the other does not. I wondered about "upgrading" the non-insualted one but wasn't sure if it would actually make a difference.....or whether it would just be a placebo effect.
If it makes any difference, the non insulated one (family bathroom) gets more use than the insulated one (en-suite)...
We had one that used semi rigid aluminium duct and it was really noisy. Replaced it with insulated acoustic duct and now you can't even hear it when it's on!
@@FrontSideBuswas anything else upgraded, or just the ducting?
@@dw4525 Just the duct. Same fan.
Great video. I liked it. Ont point of advice it to use black transitiosn between scenes instead of white. Easier on the eyes.
What about a condensation trap?
How much price
Can venting be done through a roof tile,
How would you wire 1 fan for use on 2 separate bathrooms?
You get 2 fans
Thank you…
could i utilise this in my campervan to extract air to the outside
why not?
how do I remove the Fantech bathroom grille?
How far can you duct this vertically through the roof?
It's not advised to duct vertically mate
You don’t have a link fir the inline backdraft shutter ????
Tombol
Je recherche moi même un extracteur d'air électrique et il y en a tellement que je n'e sais quoi prendre.
Never run a bathroom fan duct to the soffit; as it will suck the condensate-laden air BACK into the roof space.
Where do you run it to then?
Most uk houses don't have soffit vents. So no, it won't suck anything back
You can run it on the front face of the facia instead of the underside. Gutter goes over the front job done
?Can this be installed in a bedroom¿
sure
I’ve got similar in my loft but after a few weeks the fan fills with water? Why would this occur
I think you need to fit an extractor Fan Condensation Trap With Overflow. Toolstation do a good one.
Quality
That's called a fart muffler