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home>HRV
SUSTAINABLE 
LIVING
Installing a Heat Recovery Ventilation system
in my workshop
| October 5, 2008 | 
		 When I converted my workshop building from an 
		unfinished open structure to a super insulated,
		solar heated space back in 2001 I 
		ended up with a building that is very well sealed - perhaps too well.  The building 
		has a combination of sprayed in isocyanurate (Corbond) 
		foam and fiberglass that results in R30 walls and R40 roof insulation 
		values.  The original cheap leaky windows are sealed in the winter 
		with interior window insulation 
		panels that totally block all air movement through them.  I have been 
		concerned about air quality due to the extreme tightness of the envelope 
		especially in my closed second floor office.  This year I have been gaining an education in building science that has led me to understand that average homes need to have a minimum of 1/3 of the building air exchanged every hour at minimum for good air quality (according to the complex guidelines put out by ASHRAE). I learned this from Kurt Johnson of Fresh Air Ventilation Systems in Lewiston, Maine when he presented a very informative lecture on ventilation systems for the Midcoast Green Collaborative. According to Kurt: "I think it is reasonable to consider a rate of 1 air change per hour mechanically which would be a more likely rate that would provide optimum health and air quality. What I would say about ASHRAE is that it is better to have a standard of some ventilation than to have no standard. I personally would not consider this a rate for optimum health and air quality." Most houses leak enough that they see at least one full air exchange per day and older houses much more (at the cost of a lot of wasted heat). So I have paid the price for sealing up my building too well -- now I have stuffy uncirculated air that can be unhealthy. This is particularly noticeable in my 2nd floor office with only one (sealed) window and one interior door. The heat for this 11 by 18 foot room is a 10ft. baseboard radiator, which is occasionally supplemented by a 1kW electric heater. The only air that is forcibly removed from the building is drawn out by the 100CFM exhaust vent of the propane backup heater for my solar heating system at the far end of my building from my office. This can run from 4 to 12 or more hours a day in the dead of winter when it is cloudy. I have wondered where the incoming air comes from. Another issue is the poor draw of my wood stove, when the vent is running I often get a back draft that forces me to open the door to start a fire. Once the fire gets going I can close the door but at the cost of a lot of heat loss and subsequent poor draft. (The wood stove was added as a backup to the solar/propane heating system to reduce propane usage during extended overcast days.)  | 
	
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| DISCLAIMER! The heat recovery system presented here is a budget system designed primarily to get fresh air into my small 200sq ft office. I am aware that as a do-it-yourselfer I may not have designed an optimal system. I am sharing what I have done for educational purposes. I strongly suggest that if you are interested in installing a HRV in your home that you contact a qualified professional that can engineer a system that is optimized for your specific needs.  | 
	
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		 Since 
		the HRV will be more than adequate to ensure over 9 air exchanges per 
		day on the low setting, I have decided to leave it on low and add my own 
		external timer to run it only during my work hours and leave it off most 
		of the night when it is coldest.  The
		
		timers that I use around the place to conserve energy come from
		Harbor Freight.  
		They cost around $10.00 and are very well designed, with full battery 
		backup and multiple timing options per day. (timer as later replaced 
		with a light sensor-see below)If I run the unit 6 hours/day at the 52 Watt setting that comes to 9.36 KWH per month. We are paying 15 cents/KW her in Maine, so my monthly cost to operate the HRV will be about $1.40 But there is the extra cost to make up the lost heat to consider too, so I will be using slightly more propane and firewood.  | 
	
		 I decided to add labels to the front cover that will 
		aid me when I educate people about its function and purpose.  I am 
		constantly showing my solar heating system to people who are considering 
		adding one themselves and the HRV is installed high on the wall of 
		my utility room where it will be inaccessible to open easily.  I 
		used 2 shelf brackets, and also tied it to a ceiling beam with steel 
		strap for safety. | 
	
		![]()  Running 
		the 6 inch ducts was relatively simple.  I started with the duct 
		that feeds air into the building and ran it up to the 2nd floor and 
		behind the stub wall at the bottom of the roof slope to my office where it enters via a 
		grille behind my filing cabinets.  I used flex duct to make the 
		initial run, then rigid galvanized 6" duct for the 14 foot run to the 
		office where it elbows into the room.  SunCourt do not recommend 
		using flex duct as it creates turbulence that reduces air flow, but this 
		connection was rather challenging to make with regular rigid duct so I 
		compromised for a few feet. | 
	
		![]()  The 
		air flow from my 2nd floor office to the utility room passes through 2 
		doors that I leave closed, So I cut holes above each door and installed 
		grilles to allow air to move throughout the building unimpeded. | 
	
		![]()  I found all the duct material and grills at 
		the nearest big box hardware store and spent about $80.00 - except for the exterior vent caps.  
		I had to research them on-line and order them separately since no local 
		retailers carry 6 inch vent caps.  These caps provide weather 
		proofing and have a mesh cover to prevent birds from nesting inside.  
		For the incoming air I had to remove the back draft flapper on one unit.  
		I also added fine window screen to the 1/4" wire mesh bird screen to 
		prevent bugs from entering the vents. | 
	
The HRV unit has 2 options that address 
		defrosting the core in cold weather.  The first is an internal 
		method, to quote the manual: "The thermostat inside the unit will 
		protect the unit from freezing up under very cold outside conditions.  
		The thermostat is pre-set at the factory to stop the operation when 
		fresh air to the house cannot be held above approximately 45F (7C).  
		When the temperature in your home is 70F (21C) the frost protection can 
		normally be expected to activate at an outside temperature of 0F (-18C) 
		or lower."  Since we routinely see temperatures below 0F in 
		the winter.  I expect that this feature will be needed. The External method requires that a T be installed in the incoming air 
		duct from the outside and an electrically operated damper be installed 
		in the T such that when the unit enters freeze protection mode a signal 
		is sent to open the damper and mix house air with the external air.  
		This allows for an uninterrupted flow of fresh air while avoiding 
		freezing the unit's core.  It should also allow for warmer air 
		circulation.![]()  I ordered a damper separately 
		and installed it next to the HRV in the incoming cold air line.  
		The HRV includes a kit of parts to modify a damper to prevent it from 
		fully opening so that when it is activated it just opens about 20 
		degrees to 
		allow a small amount of warm air to enter the incoming airstream.  
		I could not find a 6" motorized damper on-line, so I got a 5" one and 
		adapted it using a 6" end cap. | 
	
| I left the HRV running on low speed and used my data logger to document a 24 hour 
		cycle on October 18-19, 2008 as the outside temperature dipped down to 
		freezing.  I placed the 4 sensors right inside the unit.  The 
		HRV output only dropped to 59F as it used the outgoing heat from the 
		building to raise the incoming air temperature by 27F in the 
		coldest part of the morning. Based on the data I have decided to try running the HRV on half speed (52 Watts) from 10:00am to 4:00pm - the warmest times of the day. Running it in the dead of winter when the temperatures here in Maine often remain below 10F at night does not seem wise! This timer strategy will cost me under $2.00/month at my electric rates. ![]()  | 
	
| October 2011 update - see below Installed real-time temperature monitoring system.  | 
	
| October 2014 update When I recently installed a single room energy recovery ventilator in the dining room of our house, it came with a special feature that allows it to respond to ambient light in the room and switch to its lowest speed at night when it is dark. This got me to thinking because I find myself adjusting the programming of the timer that switches on my HRV to correct for changing daylight hours. It really makes sense to only operate the HRV when it is light outside and therefore warmer. Also, these are the hours that I am in my office. Being an electrical engineer, I realized that I could build a device that would turn on the HRV only when the ambient light in my utility room is bright. The room has a south facing window so it gets sun very early in the morning as soon as the sun rises.  | 
	
		I 
		designed a simple circuit that uses a small photocell to detect ambient 
		light from the adjacent window,  
		and wired it into a plug box with an outlet on it.  The circuit switches 
		an internal solid-state relay to activate the outlet.  For the DIY inclined this was built into an
		AC Wall Plug 
		Enclosure made by Polycase.  These nifty boxes sell for under 
		$5 and come with a three-prong male plug built in and a cut out for a 
		standard snap in three prong outlet, and there is plenty of room inside 
		for circuitry. 
		Here is the 
		schematic of what I built, it includes a green power indicator, red 
		power on indicator and an adjustment knob for setting the light level at 
		which the relay activates.  Click the images to see larger 
		versions.  Now my HRV only operates from dawn to dusk automagically!  |