medimaker
Active Member
Got an issue that I need some guidance on.
I'm setting up my first sealed room. Just got a new dual hose 12 or 13k btu ac. I got it in the room with both hoses through the wall. The intake hose draws from the veg room and I ran 4" dryer ducting for the exhaust hose to a 4" Y splitter where my dryer vents out.
Here is the issue. That ac is about 40 feet away from the Y splitter and thus about 45 feet from freedom in my backyard. Originaly this track was for venting a cool tube with a 4" Inline vortex close to the splitter. The 4" still managed to draw warm air all that distance. When I use this with my new ac the breaker trips where the ac is plugged in.
The ac exhaust is 5" but I put a 4" decreaser on it so it would connect to that 40 footer hose. Could the back pressure from the added restriction close to the unit cause the breaker to trip? There must be considerable pressure as I was getting blowback in my dryer 45ish feet away from the ac
In an effort to reduce restriction I removed the 4" vortex just to see. It still tripped the breaker within a couple minutes. The ac is the only item on that circuit and it pulls 12 amps. But it's over a heavy duty extension cord until the sealed room gets finished.
So sealed room guys- what am i doing wrong? how do I vent that hot ac exhaust when my only way out is 45 feet away in a 4" dryer exhaust or a basement window just as far?
And what's up with that breaker popping business.
I'm setting up my first sealed room. Just got a new dual hose 12 or 13k btu ac. I got it in the room with both hoses through the wall. The intake hose draws from the veg room and I ran 4" dryer ducting for the exhaust hose to a 4" Y splitter where my dryer vents out.
Here is the issue. That ac is about 40 feet away from the Y splitter and thus about 45 feet from freedom in my backyard. Originaly this track was for venting a cool tube with a 4" Inline vortex close to the splitter. The 4" still managed to draw warm air all that distance. When I use this with my new ac the breaker trips where the ac is plugged in.
The ac exhaust is 5" but I put a 4" decreaser on it so it would connect to that 40 footer hose. Could the back pressure from the added restriction close to the unit cause the breaker to trip? There must be considerable pressure as I was getting blowback in my dryer 45ish feet away from the ac
In an effort to reduce restriction I removed the 4" vortex just to see. It still tripped the breaker within a couple minutes. The ac is the only item on that circuit and it pulls 12 amps. But it's over a heavy duty extension cord until the sealed room gets finished.
So sealed room guys- what am i doing wrong? how do I vent that hot ac exhaust when my only way out is 45 feet away in a 4" dryer exhaust or a basement window just as far?
And what's up with that breaker popping business.