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Default Dryer Vent Problem

The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely hold
the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with the
exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent between the
two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four inches from the
outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.
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Default Dryer Vent Problem

mcp6453 wrote:
The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely hold
the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with the
exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent between the
two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four inches from the
outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.


I've seen a telescoping periscope-like device that is very shallow and
has a 4" round fitting on each end

(googles)

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001D1J5Q0

does this help any?

I'm thinking you could securely attach one end to the dryer, push it
back against the wall, then secure the other end

nate


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replace "roosters" with "cox" to reply.
http://members.cox.net/njnagel
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Default Dryer Vent Problem

Nate Nagel wrote:
mcp6453 wrote:
The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely
hold the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with
the exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent
between the two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four
inches from the outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.


I've seen a telescoping periscope-like device that is very shallow and
has a 4" round fitting on each end

(googles)

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001D1J5Q0

does this help any?

I'm thinking you could securely attach one end to the dryer, push it
back against the wall, then secure the other end

nate



That would work if I cut another hole in the wall, which I may have to
do. Thanks for the link. I'll keep looking for a
straight-through-the-hole solution, if there is one. It would be nice to
be able to pull out the dryer and be able to put it back into position.
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Default Dryer Vent Problem

mcp6453 wrote in
:

Nate Nagel wrote:
mcp6453 wrote:
The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely
hold the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with
the exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent
between the two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four
inches from the outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration
passes inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm
not aware of.


I've seen a telescoping periscope-like device that is very shallow
and has a 4" round fitting on each end

(googles)

http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B001D1J5Q0

does this help any?

I'm thinking you could securely attach one end to the dryer, push it
back against the wall, then secure the other end

nate



That would work if I cut another hole in the wall, which I may have to
do. Thanks for the link. I'll keep looking for a
straight-through-the-hole solution, if there is one. It would be nice
to be able to pull out the dryer and be able to put it back into
position.


Nates solution is the most common way to offset it several inches
up/down,left/right. The only thing I don't like about those is that
sharp and narrow 90 degree turn twice creates a lot of resistance.

But being that it's an outside wall the total run length is only a foot
or two if I understand right. Those two sharp turns are probably not
such a big deal.

I had such a situation once. I just cut the hole that would make it a
straight-through hole, ran a regular dryer vent from the outside,

http://www.amazon.com/Whirlpool-4396...7554924&sr=1-8

cut it to length for the inside and attached a short piece of vent hose
from the dryer directly to the vent pipe. Probably comes with a ring
that you can attach to the inside drywall.

Keep in mind:

Be sure to cut the 4" hole above all the bottom wall 2xX's plates.
Be sure the hole will not hit a stud.
Watch out for any wires in the wall where you're cutting the hole.

Suggest cutting from the inside first. Use like a hand rock saw and
gently make a hole you can put your hand/light in and feel around. Cut to size
if all is OK. Coffee can or it's plastic lid is perfect 4" size to draw
circle.
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Default Dryer Vent Problem

In article ,
mcp6453 wrote:

The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely hold
the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with the
exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent between the
two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four inches from the
outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.


Huh? Is there some reason the standard metal accordion style won't work?
I'd think 20" or so of extended length would collapse to 4".


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Default Dryer Vent Problem

On Fri, 06 Nov 2009 19:02:15 -0500, mcp6453 wrote:

The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely hold
the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with the
exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent between the
two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four inches from the
outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.


I gather this is a gas dryer, even though the stove was electric????
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Default Dryer Vent Problem

On Nov 6, 6:02*pm, mcp6453 wrote:
The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely hold
the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with the
exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent between the
two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four inches from the
outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.


I'm confused by the usage of the words exhaust vent vs the dryer
vent. I think there are rectangular boxes that fit/screw on the back
of the dryer at the vent output that have an output going up
vertically to which you connect the hose going to the thru the wall
pipe assembly. You haven't said if this is from a basement dryer,
first floor dryer, etc... A better description would make it a lot
easier to understand
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Default Dryer Vent Problem


"Van Chocstraw" wrote in message
...
mcp6453 wrote:
The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely hold
the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with the
exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent between the
two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four inches from the
outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I cannot
get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the exhaust is
not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.


The rigid pipe on the end of the dryer outlet face is all you need. I
installed one that way. Push the straight pipe through the wall into the
dryer blower outlet. If you have it lined up it works fine.


I would also agree with this method. But if you have a slight misalignment,
the periscope devices mentioned earlier come in three configurations,
allowing different offsets. One is like only an offset of o" to a couple of
inches. Think of these as a type of collector box which you could even have
manufactured by a sheet metal man if the periscope function wasn't
desirable. I would guess the reason for your problem is that the home
builder built the w/d area to accommadate what is called a flat back dryer
rather then the larger dryers. About 5 cu ft versus 7+ cu ft. About a 2"
difference in dryer depth. I sold dryers for about 27 years and this was a
common problem...especially in the Phoenix area where a lot of condos and
town houses were built. One of my customers couldn't figure out why his
house wouldn't handle the bigger dryer when the identical house across the
street would. He got a copy of the blueprints from his builder and found
out the framer had put down the sill plate (and thus the wall) for the back
of the laundry alcove on the wrong side of the line.

Tom G


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Default Dryer Vent Problem

On Fri, 6 Nov 2009 19:36:38 -0800 (PST), "hr(bob) "
wrote:

On Nov 6, 6:02*pm, mcp6453 wrote:
The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely hold
the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with the
exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent between the
two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four inches from the
outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration passes
inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm not aware of.


I'm confused by the usage of the words exhaust vent vs the dryer
vent. I think there are rectangular boxes that fit/screw on the back
of the dryer at the vent output that have an output going up
vertically to which you connect the hose going to the thru the wall
pipe assembly. You haven't said if this is from a basement dryer,
first floor dryer, etc... A better description would make it a lot
easier to understand


For sure. I lined up my dryer vent output with the wall, put lipstick
on the edge to mark the location, and cut a hole in the cinderblock to
match the output. When I got all the way through, I found a bunch of
dirt. I dug for a while and then gave up. That's when I noticed my
dryer was in the basement.
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Default Dryer Vent Problem

mm wrote in
:

On Fri, 6 Nov 2009 19:36:38 -0800 (PST), "hr(bob) "
wrote:

On Nov 6, 6:02*pm, mcp6453 wrote:
The laundry room that holds our dryer is only big enough to barely
hold the washer and dryer. The dryer is backed up to back wall with
the exhaust vent. There is literally no way to put a dryer vent
between the two. The exhaust port on the dryer is no more than four
inches from the outside wall.

Is anyone aware of a vent mechanism that we could use to vent to the
outside? Apparently the vent was jury rigged as a straight pipe. I
cannot get the pipe to securely attach to the dryer. Therefore, the
exhaust is not safely installed.

I'm not sure what to do. It surprises me that the configuration
passes inspection, unless there is a way to create a vent that I'm
not aware of.


I'm confused by the usage of the words exhaust vent vs the dryer
vent. I think there are rectangular boxes that fit/screw on the back
of the dryer at the vent output that have an output going up
vertically to which you connect the hose going to the thru the wall
pipe assembly. You haven't said if this is from a basement dryer,
first floor dryer, etc... A better description would make it a lot
easier to understand


For sure. I lined up my dryer vent output with the wall, put lipstick
on the edge to mark the location, and cut a hole in the cinderblock to
match the output. When I got all the way through, I found a bunch of
dirt. I dug for a while and then gave up. That's when I noticed my
dryer was in the basement.


Couldn't you vent it into the sewar main with like a big check valve?

:-)
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