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Kyle Kyle is offline
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Default Radon mitigation, electric costs and green living

The Wife and I have a contract on a house where the inspection just
showed a radon gas level of 13.1 picocuries/liter. Mind you, that's in
a house that has been unoccupied for a few months after a foreclosure,
but still, over three times the EPA's limit of acceptable risk tells
me mitigation is in order.

Before I go on, let me address the naysayers: go away! I've already
done the research and made up my mind and your ranting about a money-
grabbing or government conspiracy serves no purpose here. I am
convinced of the hazards of radon gas in recent homes because we make
'em so damned air-tight that the gas builds up, unlike my old home
built in 1952 which was better about venting this stuff (and cost more
to heat and cool as a result).

Anyway. I have two concerns I hope the group can address:

(1) the active sub-slab depressurization requires an in-line fan that
runs 24-7-365, which is gonna increase my electric bill by a bit and
then some, I'm sure. Does anyone know of effective alternate-energy
systems such as a solar-powered fan or some such?

(2) How loud are these fans? If I'm on the back deck and the venting
pipe is around the corner of the house, am I going to hear it? What
about at night? Will the neighbors hear? (Might want to see if any of
the neighbors have systems, too...)