(05-27-2020, 07:14 PM)blackhat Wrote: Have you spoken to the installer?
No, I just took the thing apart yesterday afternoon. I'll be sending the pics and my findings over to the firm's owner.
(05-28-2020, 05:20 AM)Duane N Wrote: I'd also look at the slope of the exhaust and intake PVC pipes for the furnace. They are supposed to slope back towards the furnace.
Glad you found the main issue.
Thanks for pointing that out. I didn't know that, but I looked again and see that the spec calls for minimum of 1/4" slope per 12" of horizontal run on the venting. I am not planning to make any changes other than the last couple of feet going through the sill and the exterior portions, but I'll check the rest of of it. The fix will require me to splice some new pipe inside the house which will extend far enough outside the house.
Overall, based on what I've found, the installers failed to on these points:
- They didn't install the intake and exhaust termination vents a minimum of 12" above expected snow line. For here, that's about 24" above grade.
- The termination vent fixture used was inappropriate for this application and it was installed in a way that caused long term damage to the materials around it. Maybe they didn't know what the moisture and gases would do to Hardie Plank, but that's a common building material. Further, it was installed so that the warm, moisture-rich exhaust was forced onto the cut edge of the hardie plank at that spot.
Argh. This is not an expensive fix, and it's not even particularly hard. But when you spend a lot of $$ for a new system, you expect it to be done right. There were other issues with the installation that caused some rework right up front as well.