(08-27-2023, 03:47 PM)JosephP Wrote: Calculate the square footage of "open roof" with your ridge vent vs. with box vents. Generally boxes get your more venting.
I'm unclear why leaving the boxes WITH the ridge vents is a bad plan. Is too much venting a common problem?
It interrupts the air flow to the ridge vent. Too many box vents will prevent hot air from flowing all the way up the sheathing and out through the ridge.
Think of the problems that would be caused by poking holes in your HVAC duct or in the side of your chimney. The hottest air is at the ridge and it's needed to pull air from the soffits. ... heat rises. So if you have box vents, soffit vents and a ridge vent, the ridge vent will pull some air from the box vents and some from the soffit vents. If the soffit vents are inadequate, it will draw very little from the soffits. So wet, hot air is stuck below the box vents. The heat will rise but not the air. Sure, some will get out but not like it would if it had a straight path from the soffit to the ridge.
I had a graphic but cant find it. The air movement from the soffit to the ridge creates kind of like a venturi effect which moves the air in a circular wheel like fashion. So all that air is tumbling, pulling air from the attic floor, rolling it up the sheathing and out the ridge. Air is moving in the entire attic preventing moisture and mold problems. That's why gable vents aren't very efficient. They only pull heat out of each end of the attic but since there's no make up air, the moisture stays in the attic and most of the heat. Put a powered fan in one end and you get real air movement but the air comes from the other gable vent. It doesn't come from the insulation or attic floor which is what were are really trying to cool and dry. You get a straight line wind from one vent to the other. It only really cools and drys the peak of the roof.
Ideally, we want as wide a ridge vent as possible and as much venting in the soffits as possible.
I can go into an attic and the heat is unbearable and another attic where it's very tolerable.
I did one last year in a 1900s church with a slate roof. There were 2 furnaces and 6 air conditioner air handlers in it. The only ventilation was a gable vent at each end, maybe 80 ft apart. Zero air movement. I had to leave the attic and cool off quite a few times before I got every thing inspected. Temps were about 140 in the middle of the attic. The church has added soffit venting and powered one end of the gable vents. It's a lot better but still hot.