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John Weiss[_4_] John Weiss[_4_] is offline
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Default How to avoid ice-clogged furnace air intake pipe?

MNRebecca wrote:

Another question. Is it possible the builder/installer (furnace went
in during a major house renovation) made the intake pipe face east
(instead of down) to achieve a 180 degree variance with the exhaust
pipe? They're only a few inches apart. If I add some pipe and change
the intake direction from east to straight down, it'll only be 90
degrees different from the exhaust pipe opening. Have I just greatly
increased my likelihood of carbon monoxide poisoning (from the intake
pipe sucking in exhaust) or doesn't it matter much since it's only
going to get burned up in the furnace anyway?


First, there should be little to no CO in the exhaust unless the
furnace is defective. If the heat exchanger leaks, the intake air will
not be your problem. When the furnace is operating properly, the
exhaust is high in CO2 and water, and low in Oxygen. So, you have a
higher probability of sucking water into the intake, where it will
condense and freeze.

You might ask your gas company repair department what the code says
about this type of furnace. I suspect the installation is not up to
code, or is marginal.


By the way, I double-checked.
1) They really do face east (intake) and west (exhaust). I generally
think of the wind as coming primarily from the NW in my area, but I
guess it does come from E or SE about half the time.
2) The pipes are about 1 foot above the ground, not 2.5. Maybe the
intake doesn't face down for fear of a drift forming beneath it.


At that level a drift could cover either pipe regardless of
orientation...