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meirman
 
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In alt.home.repair on 17 Oct 2004 11:45:59 -0700
(David) posted:

I have posted this question in the past, but never received a
satisfactory answer. Perhaps this time someone smarter than I can
come up with a good solution...

Question: How to stop AC ducts in the attic from accumulating water
during the winter

Environment: Ranch house, baseboard hot water heating, whole house
air conditioner with AC registers in the ceiling. Floor of attic
insulated to at least R40. Ceiling of attic not insulated. AC air
handler in attic attached to rigid duct surrounded by 4 inches of
insulation. Rigid duct traverses the center of the attic for about
2/3 the length of the house. Flexible, insulated 6 inch duct rated
R4.2 attaches the ceiling registers to the rigid duct. AC ceiling
registers have internal dampers that can be closed in the winter.

Problem: When the AC ceiling registers are closed for the winter, the
internal dampers do not affect a perfect seal. Some warm, moist air


That's normal, to not make a perfect seal. You mean "effect".

from the house will leak through the ceiling registers into the


If the louvers don't stick out (too much?), and are steel, maybe you
can get some of that magnetic sheeting, such as are used on truck
doors to temporarily label a truck with the business name, and put
them over the registers every fall. Are brass registers steel
underneath, or are they solid brass? You can tell with a magnet.

flexible duct and into the rigid duct. Even though the rigid duct is
insulated, on very cold winter days, the internal temperature of the
flexible and rigid ducts will be low enough to condense the water
vapor in the warm air that leaked from the house into the ducts. This
condensed water accumulates in the rigid duct, causing rusting and if


Replace this with aluminum? That will cause more cooling loss when
cooling the house with a hot attic, but you have insulation around it
anyhow.

there is enough water, leaking back into the house through the ceiling
registers.

My solution: Not perfect. Every fall, I enter the attic and
disconnect the flexible ducts from the ceiling registers. I cover the
ceiling registers with lots of insulation. In the late spring, I go
into the attic and reverse this process by reconnecting the flexible
ducts to the ceiling registers. This process is a royal pain. I
would like a more permanent solution.



Meirman
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