Radon Mitigation

   / Radon Mitigation #11  
I wonder if a wind-powered turbine vent would do well enough (at some locations, anyway), rather than have a powered fan going all the time?
 
   / Radon Mitigation #12  
Whether you need an exhaust fan or not, depends on how much radon you have...

Last house I was involved in, HAD to have a fan to meet code... and that was in up state NY.

SR
 
   / Radon Mitigation
  • Thread Starter
#13  
As has been said, you don't want two pipes. The principal behind Radon mitigation is putting the sub-slab area under a negative pressure (ie. vacuum). If you have an inlet pipe, you will A) not be allowing the sub-slab to depressurize; and B) creating a loop that most likely will not communicate with all areas under the floor/membrane.

Also, make sure the radon fan is mounted outdoors. That way, if its discharge pipe is ever accidentally disconnected you won't be filling your house with radiation.

I went with one pipe because that is the prevailing method. But I question the negative pressure concept of one pipe and no inlet for air. Mostly because of experience with a wood shop and saw dust collection. When you collect dust from a closed saw table you get the most effective dust collection by having a vacuum pipe attached and an inlet for air. Air flow makes the system much more effective. You still maintain a negative pressure environment but you have air movement which makes the system work much better.
 
   / Radon Mitigation #14  
I went with one pipe because that is the prevailing method. But I question the negative pressure concept of one pipe and no inlet for air. Mostly because of experience with a wood shop and saw dust collection. When you collect dust from a closed saw table you get the most effective dust collection by having a vacuum pipe attached and an inlet for air. Air flow makes the system much more effective. You still maintain a negative pressure environment but you have air movement which makes the system work much better.

Difference is, with a shop vacuum setup, you know the pathway of the contaminants you want to remove. Under a slab, you have no idea and may be bypassing the source of the radon by giving the air a path-of-least-resistance to follow.
 
   / Radon Mitigation #15  
I went with one pipe because that is the prevailing method. But I question the negative pressure concept of one pipe and no inlet for air. Mostly because of experience with a wood shop and saw dust collection. When you collect dust from a closed saw table you get the most effective dust collection by having a vacuum pipe attached and an inlet for air. Air flow makes the system much more effective. You still maintain a negative pressure environment but you have air movement which makes the system work much better.
SO, you think it's the same, to pull sawdust through a solid floor/metal cabinet, as it is to pull a gas through porous dirt??

No comparison at all...

SR
 

Tractor & Equipment Auctions

1998 CATERPILLAR IT28G WHEEL LOADER (A51242)
1998 CATERPILLAR...
John Deere Imatch Quick Hitch (A50514)
John Deere Imatch...
Hyster H225E (A47384)
Hyster H225E (A47384)
2010 Ford Edge SE SUV (A51694)
2010 Ford Edge SE...
DeeZee Crossover Aluminum Truck Tool Box - Secure Weather-Resistant Storage for Pickup Beds (A52128)
DeeZee Crossover...
UNUSED MOWER KING SSEFGC175 HD FLAIL MOWER (A51244)
UNUSED MOWER KING...
 
Top