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[email protected] May 10th 07 04:41 AM

Sizing a radon fan
 
Hi All:

I moved into a new house that I built a couple of months ago. I
bought a safety siren radon meter and let it do it's thing for about
a month now. My readings are in the 5.6 area.

My basement is approximately 1800 sq ft., before the masons
poured the slab I put two 3" perforated pipes into the gravel base
in case we had a radon issue. I also had the plumber run the
radon vent pipe from the roof down to the basement so I can
tie them together. A couple of questions:

- How reliable/accurate are the readings from these ~$100 radon units?
- Is there a formula that tells me how many CFM I need to draw based
on square footage, current radon level, etc.?
- Should I just seal off the sump pit, or run it into the other two 3"
PVC
lines running to the roof? Is a piece of lexan cut to fit and some
polyurethane caulk good enough?
- Given the current state of the basement (two radon pipes sticking
out
of the slab with a shoddy little cap on each, plus an open sump
pit),
should I try piping everything without the fan to see how the
levels
change?

Thanks,

-Marc


George May 12th 07 04:43 AM

Sizing a radon fan
 
I found the ppl at Infiltec (540-943-2776) quite helpful, and willing to
talk.

I have one of those radon units. It pretty much matches the readings I
got with the mail-in samplers. (Our levels are around 16.) Also, it
does go to 0 in an wooden outbuilding.

Beyond that, we still haven't done anything. Technical issues, other
problems, blah, blah, blah.

I'd like to see your results, if you feel like posting them when you're
done.

George


On 9 May 2007 20:41:34 -0700, "
wrote:

Hi All:

I moved into a new house that I built a couple of months ago. I
bought a safety siren radon meter and let it do it's thing for about
a month now. My readings are in the 5.6 area.

My basement is approximately 1800 sq ft., before the masons
poured the slab I put two 3" perforated pipes into the gravel base
in case we had a radon issue. I also had the plumber run the
radon vent pipe from the roof down to the basement so I can
tie them together. A couple of questions:

- How reliable/accurate are the readings from these ~$100 radon units?
- Is there a formula that tells me how many CFM I need to draw based
on square footage, current radon level, etc.?
- Should I just seal off the sump pit, or run it into the other two 3"
PVC
lines running to the roof? Is a piece of lexan cut to fit and some
polyurethane caulk good enough?
- Given the current state of the basement (two radon pipes sticking
out
of the slab with a shoddy little cap on each, plus an open sump
pit),
should I try piping everything without the fan to see how the
levels
change?

Thanks,

-Marc



[email protected] May 12th 07 01:17 PM

Sizing a radon fan
 
I wonder if one had a interior french drain system that drained to
daylight say near the street if radon levels would be less.

our neighborhood is a hot spot and we could use the drain system,
wnder if it might fix both issues?


Marc Dostie May 17th 07 09:24 PM

Sizing a radon fan
 
George:

No prob, when I get around to it and remediate, I'll reset the radon
tester
and post my results. Thanks for the Infiltec number.

-Marc



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