Jim Rosenow
Line Up and Wait
A question posed to the amazing diversity of this forum....
About 10 years ago we built a super-tight ICF house (tight to the point we have to crack a window or the clothes dryer isn't able to suck enough air out of the house to dry). We have a HRV of course, and have been running it on low to ventilate all these years, like the experts in the field say we should. We're essentially blowing out our hot air and sucking in cold in the winter, reverse in the summer. I hate wasting those BTUs, even tho the HRV, admittedly, saves many of them.
The house is completely electric...no combustion gases or residue of any kind. The carpets, paints, and other volatile organic sources should (assumption on my part) have off-gassed by now.
I've been trying an experiment since it got cold this fall...I'm running the HRV only when my internal logic says it's warranted...i.e, when cooking, showering, when it feels 'stuffy' inside, etc. Of course we accumulate humidity constantly..my wife and the dogs insist on breathing regularly. The result has been that by running a stand-alone de-humidifier enough to maintain 50 percent relative humidity, we produce enough (all internal to the house, remember) heat by the process that until it gets down around freezing outside, the heat pump doesn't even run.
The furnace fan is on 'low' constantly, running thru a 16x25x4 MERV 13 filter. Of course the relevant question is....'How's the pollution level inside?' Our 2.5 Particulate Matter runs between 000 and 002, and the level actually increases when we ventilate heavily. The VOC's vary between .6 and 1.3, and stay the same when we ventilate. Based on the oximeter we use in the airplane, our oxygen levels are good in the house.
I have yet to find a government or 'authoritative' source that tells me if these levels are good, bad, or indifferent. Is it bad not to have fresh air if the inside air is good? Looking for different thoughts and views. Thanks!
Jim
About 10 years ago we built a super-tight ICF house (tight to the point we have to crack a window or the clothes dryer isn't able to suck enough air out of the house to dry). We have a HRV of course, and have been running it on low to ventilate all these years, like the experts in the field say we should. We're essentially blowing out our hot air and sucking in cold in the winter, reverse in the summer. I hate wasting those BTUs, even tho the HRV, admittedly, saves many of them.
The house is completely electric...no combustion gases or residue of any kind. The carpets, paints, and other volatile organic sources should (assumption on my part) have off-gassed by now.
I've been trying an experiment since it got cold this fall...I'm running the HRV only when my internal logic says it's warranted...i.e, when cooking, showering, when it feels 'stuffy' inside, etc. Of course we accumulate humidity constantly..my wife and the dogs insist on breathing regularly. The result has been that by running a stand-alone de-humidifier enough to maintain 50 percent relative humidity, we produce enough (all internal to the house, remember) heat by the process that until it gets down around freezing outside, the heat pump doesn't even run.
The furnace fan is on 'low' constantly, running thru a 16x25x4 MERV 13 filter. Of course the relevant question is....'How's the pollution level inside?' Our 2.5 Particulate Matter runs between 000 and 002, and the level actually increases when we ventilate heavily. The VOC's vary between .6 and 1.3, and stay the same when we ventilate. Based on the oximeter we use in the airplane, our oxygen levels are good in the house.
I have yet to find a government or 'authoritative' source that tells me if these levels are good, bad, or indifferent. Is it bad not to have fresh air if the inside air is good? Looking for different thoughts and views. Thanks!
Jim
Last edited: