I’ve been racking my brain lately thinking of what are good methods to increase internal airflow in a house with few windows, all facing the wrong direction to catch wind. What are your ideas?

Edit: Breaking a wall to make more windows isn’t an option.

  • @Vej@lemm.ee
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    692 months ago

    Suck the air out. Pushing air in with fans creates a higher pressure zone in the house. You won’t move as much air. On the upper floors where it’s warmer suck the air out of what windows you have, but push the air in at the lower windows. Personally my house doesn’t have any windows, this is Lemmy we use Linux here.

      • @Vej@lemm.ee
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        62 months ago

        I have been trying to slip in Linux references when I can. I swear 25% of our user base is Linux SysAdmins.

        • @GabuOP
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          12 months ago

          I swear 25% of our user base is Linux SysAdmins.

          That’s impossible, as it would mean 25% of our user base is also furry. Wait a second…

    • @umbrella
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      32 months ago

      where it’s warmer suck the air out of what windows you have, but push the air in at the lower windows

      computer case airflow!

      • @zingo@lemmy.ca
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        22 months ago

        Fuck! Exactly the idea that hatched in my head.

        So lower front fans are more efficient to suck in cold air than higher ones, while the exhaust fan in the back is higher and more efficient for moving hot air away from the case as hot air rises (ryzens).

      • @umbrella
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        2 months ago

        this is only effective if the inlet is well filtered, otherwise you will just be blowing outside dust in anyway

      • @Vej@lemm.ee
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        2 months ago

        In theory, but by lowering the effectiveness of the fan. You could put outward facing fans in each window and a furnace dust filter on the window sucking the air inward.

        Example blowing air into a balloon. The air goes into the balloon, because the balloon can expand. If you had a balloon as a house, and the fan was your mouth, your house shouldn’t expand. The air has nowhere to go, so it doesn’t blow in very effectively.

        I personally kept most of my house cool by running a single window AC that has a filter and a single fan. The AC blows in at the lower levels of the shaded side of the house. The fan sucks out the hot air from the second floor One ~8,000btu AC will keep the house comfortable until it hits ~97f.

        Moving air out of a house is more about sucking the air out than pushing the air in. As long as their is a flow to it.

  • @Squibbles@lemmy.ca
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    2 months ago

    Mathias Wandel on YouTube made some good videos a few years ago about maximizing airflow through a house with fans. One big finding was that rather than having a fan directly in a window or door pointing out it is actually best to have it a few meters away and directed at the opening. That allows the fan’s airstream pull in and start moving much more air in the room out the opening. He used strips of paper hanging in doorways around the house and also I think took anemometer readings to get good measures of the airflow.

    I think the general theory is to run the fans starting in the evening once the air temp outside is lower than inside, then close up the house in the morning to trap the cool overnight air?

    https://youtu.be/1L2ef1CP-yw?si=aLTlAMKv_3p3ri2q I think he may have made multiple videos on the topic

    • @Doxin@pawb.social
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      116 days ago

      You’ll see this sort of thing in action when firefighters are ventilating a house with fans. They’ll move the fans back until the air stream covers the entire opening it’s aimed at. Any less and the spots the air stream doesn’t hit are gonna have air flowing the wrong way.

      A good trick I’ve found is that fans in long hallways are markedly more effective than pretty much anywhere else.

  • @bestusername@aussie.zone
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    222 months ago

    I do this all the time, just stick 2 fans in windows on opposite sides of the house, 1 facing in, 1 facing out. Bam; cross ventilation!

  • dumples
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    82 months ago

    In college I lived in an old house with bad windows without AC. So to keep the house cool we had all windows open with fans blowing air facing outside. You can also do half the house outside and half blowing inside to get a fake cross breathe

    • @GabuOP
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      2 months ago

      Attics aren’t a thing around here, unfortunately. I could get a warehouse-styled convection fan, but the cost is a bit spooky when I don’t even know if it’ll work.

  • @VicksVaporBBQrub@sh.itjust.works
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    2 months ago

    Research and shop around for a type of fan called a centrifugal blower or utility blower. These fans are designed specifically for entire space ventilation. They sound like tiny jet engines. The same fans that inflate bouncy fun houses or the fans you sometimes see on a storefront wet floor during a rainy day to blow dry. Output rates of small units 100 to 500cfm (cubic feet per minute) will replace all air inside a 2-car garage space every hour. Mid range blowers 600-900cfm will replace that same air space every 5-10min (approx. 6x per hour). Higher velocity blowers >1000cfm will clear an entire 1-story house (typically for HVAC or factory use) and is more efficient and quieter than the biggest attic fan style unit.

    After you have bought the raw power of air movement, then experiment with positive pressure and negative pressure flow setups (suck vs. blow). And then finally other per room or per window configurations as needed.

    • @GabuOP
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      32 months ago

      Thanks for the tip, it does seem quite interesting. From what I could find locally, prices are all over the place, so I’ll spend some time reading spec sheets haha

  • I have a similar thing with how my house was built. What I do is open all the windows that will open and setup small box fans in the windows on one side of the house to push the inside air outside. Seems to work fairly well.

  • DaGeek247
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    22 months ago

    I used this style of fan to get the neighbors cigarette smell (that seeped in through the goddamn walls) out of my downstairs. I had a two story apt, with windows like this, where W=window room and R=room without a window;

    W|W R|W

    The best airflow was for the top floor where the windows were opposite and the natural breeze could do its own thing, but the single downstairs window was good enough to clear out the cigarette smell on its own so long as an upstairs window was at least open.

    You say your windows are all on one badly ventilated side; have a push/pull setup with the airflow. Use one of your current fans to bridge the gap at the stairs and it’ll work great.

    I found i got the most airflow when pulling in downstairs and pushing out upstairs, regardless of temperature, but i live in a hot area. Definitely test yours to see what works best in your situation.

    I never tried using fans away from the windows as mentioned before me, but that’s definitely worth doing as soon as you can, just to see how much it inproves your situation.

  • BarqsHasBite
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    22 months ago

    Do you have a forced air furnace? Some of them have a switch to turn the fan on, which would pull in air and push it out the vents (just without the heating).

  • BarqsHasBite
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    22 months ago

    Are all the windows on one side? Are any of these full door length? Front and back door? You’re not giving us much to go on.

    Get a full roll out screen door for the front and back doors. You can also take a big fan, place it just outside the door pointed into into house.

    Assuming the windows are parallel to the wind, can you construct a vertical awning (if I can call it that) to catch the wind?

    • @GabuOP
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      32 months ago

      It’s an European style long, tall and thin house with wonky internal geometry. All windows face the street, parallel to the wind, at different heights. That’s what gives me the most trouble - getting any air flow to effectively make a C curve.

      can you construct a vertical awning (if I can call it that) to catch the wind?

      I thought about it, but it seems like it’d only make things worse by creating an even bigger region with stagnant air in front of the windows, unless I were to invade the street (which is highly illegal, for obvious reasons).

        • @GabuOP
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          2 months ago

          There is literally zero space between the front and the street?

          The opposite - there’s too much space, with buildings on both sides. Think a room as tall as the house in front of it, but with the street-facing wall removed.

          • BarqsHasBite
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            22 months ago

            So your neighbour’s houses are sticking out further? Well you’re probably going to have to rely on fans then. And the rolling screen door. Place one fan outside the door pointed into the house. On the other side place it inside the house and pointed out.

    • @GabuOP
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      32 months ago

      They’re good for circulating air that has already entered a space, but not so good at getting the air there to begin with.

      • @some_guy@lemmy.sdf.org
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        12 months ago

        True. But I tried the fan-in-the-window technique and I think that if your window is so large that there’s a huge gap, it’s not terribly effective.

        I did have good luck one year putting a popcorn bowl of ice water in front of a fan pointed right at me on my desk. It doesn’t cool the room, but it cooled me.

    • @GabuOP
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      22 months ago

      I’ve tried various configurations of fans pushing and pulling air, but none are much help. The internal geometry of this house is wonky.

  • HubertManne
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    12 months ago

    I usually can get some if I have one window opened high and one low. The pressure differential is not a lot but it will cause a flow.

  • @ShepherdPie@midwest.social
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    12 months ago

    I open my windows and set the HVAC to “fan mode.” Many of the ducts are right below the windows so it really helps get the air moving. It doesn’t create a “wind tunnel” but it does help move the air around everywhere.

    • Zorque
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      72 months ago

      I feel like if you have airflow problems, you probably don’t have forced air ventilation.