Over 700,000 strictly plumbing related posts
Welcome to Plbg.com (also known as PlumbingForum.com) where plumbing advice, education, information, help and suggestions are provided by some of the most experienced plumbers and plumbing contractors anywhere who all wish to "give back" to society. Since 1996 we have been free without popup or other invasive ads and known to be the best online STRICTLY PLUMBING advice site. If you have questions about plumbing, toilets, sinks, faucets, drains, sewers, water filters, venting, water heating, showers, pumps, and other strictly PLUMBING related issues then you've come to the right place. Please refrain from asking or discussing legal questions, or pricing, or where to find and/or purchase products, or any business issues, or for contractor referrals, or any other questions or issues not specifically related to plumbing. Keep all posts positive and absolutely no advertising. Our site is completely free, without ads or pop-ups and we don't track you. We absolutely do not sell your personal information. We are made possible by:
Author:
packy (MA)
i would put a 4 inch aluminum 90 on the dryer then a 4 x 24 inch aluminum vent pipe then another 90. the hose you have should then reach. remember to duct tape the joints..
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
george 7941 (Canada)
Type B hose should never have much slack in it because it will droop and form a trap for lint.
I don't like packy's solution either because now the flex duct is horizontal and will droop even it is Type A, the stiff flex duct.
I don't think you even need a new stiff flex duct, you can just stretch the existing duct to the length necessary. just don't stretch it any more than absolutely necessary.
While there will be some droop, it will be less than it was packy's way.
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
sum (FL)
I agree the type A flex duct is not desirable because if too long it will droop and form a kind of P-trap.
So that goes back to the type B stiffer flex duct.
If I stretch it so that it's length is whatever length it needs when the tower is pulled all the way out, then when you push it back in it will also droop some, or bunch up some how that I can't see or reach behind to guide.
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
george 7941 (Canada)
There isn't much of a choice with this setup.
Type A will droop but not as much as type B, and the bends will be softer.
The three foot fall from ceiling to middle of tower really helps because the duct can move sideways, reducing the extra length of the duct necessary to pull the tower out.
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
steve (CA)
Sum, is there a side venting option for the dryer, so the vent could be attached with the dryer in place(if there's enough clearance in the closet)?
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
sum (FL)
steve, there is no side mounting option.
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
DaveMill (CA)
Sum you actually have two other choices: recess the vent loop into a wall cavity if there’s room:
[dryerbox.com]
The one I’m considering: a solid vent adapter that mates with the vent outlet in the wall:
[www.amazon.com]
Those come in various lengths, angled for both floor and wall inlets. Google “slide out dryer vent”
|
Post Reply
|
Author:
sum (FL)
DaveMill,
I have a recessed vent box. The connection is vertically up but the box ends higher than the dryer vent on the back of the tower, and so the duct must make a 90 somewhere.
I have used most of these adjustable vent adapters at my rental. None of them applies to my situation though. If I use one of those that is like an elongated Z shape, I would have to make a 90 at the top to connect to an adapter, than on the low side I have to have another flex duct to lead to the dryer's back, that's three hard 90s.
|
Post Reply
|
Please note:
- Inappropriate messages or blatant advertising will be deleted. We cannot be held responsible for bad or inadequate advice.
- Plbg.com has no control over external content that may be linked to from messages posted here. Please follow external links with caution.
- Plbg.com is strictly for the exchange of plumbing related advice and NOT to ask about pricing/costs, nor where to find a product (try Google), nor how to operate or promote a business, nor for ethics (law) and the like questions.
- Plbg.com is also not a place to ask radiant heating (try HeatingHelp.com), electrical or even general construction type questions. We are exclusively for plumbing questions.
Search for plumbing parts on our sponsor's site:
Special thanks to our sponsor:
|