I used the 12 inch version of this brand for mold removal in my basement and these things move air as advertised lol. setup a wood box with a furnace filter to try n keep the air going out cleaner and make it a sealed exhaust port out of the basement. Holly crap pulled such a vacume on my entire house the main floor doors were hard to open. also tripped my furnace pulling air back down the exhaust stack and Evan showed me my plumbing clean out trap was leaking as it pulled Seward gas into my house. obviously I had to run it with other basement windows open to keep the house pressure up but very impressed with the price lol
Thank you for your video, I was thinking to buy one of these. You mentioned to make sure that there is air coming from the other side of the room because otherwise problems could arise. I was planning to use this one to vent out cooking odors in my kitchen, but the kitchen is located in a dead-end at the end-corner of my long 30-ft dining-living room. The living room has a large window, but again the large window is located about 30-ft away from the kitchen. Do you think that it will be dangerous to use this device to suck out the smelly air from the kitchen? I was hoping that new fresh air would be drawn in from the living room to replace the smelly air that I remove from the kitchen (essentially fresh air travelling outside of the hose in the opposite direction to the smelly air travelling into the hose). After seeing your video, I am now wondering if the device will draw air from the HVAC output located on the kitchen sealing, thus damaging the HVAC... Thank you
Are these suppose to turn off after 10- 15 minutes. Mines keep turning off like it have a cool down period. I wasted my money. I return and my brand new one is turning off also.
I do nails in my sunroom and the smell of the monomer is quite strong can i use this to remove the order without it affecting my furnace. I would be using it like 5 hours a day it would be turn on. Is there one that is not as strong for a small room
@@elbahenriquez9825 you definitely need to be carful with exhausting home air, if you have a hrv or make up air in the house that would be best. But at the very least I would be opening a window while using this unit.
@@hammerandhome thanks I just don’t feel like cutting my roof this looks like a good alternative if you think it would move the hot air out to the window below
If you put a furnace filter on the front of that,you will eventually burn out the motor! It tells you not to obstruct the front of the unit! Due to overheating! Directions/manual!
Thanks it didn't work. I attached it to my dust collector but due to reduced diameter to 4 inches the fan keeps turning off and starts again in 10 minutes. I don't know how to make the fan to run continuously.
@@nnoor9059 sounds like you might be over heating the fan. Reducing the hose diameter will put a lot of back pressure on the fan. I wouldn’t use it like that.
Having the hose on the other side (drawing air through the hose) with the fan outside works better for me - also quieter. I'm told it has something to do with back pressure from pushing air through the long hose.
I used the 12 inch version of this brand for mold removal in my basement and these things move air as advertised lol. setup a wood box with a furnace filter to try n keep the air going out cleaner and make it a sealed exhaust port out of the basement. Holly crap pulled such a vacume on my entire house the main floor doors were hard to open. also tripped my furnace pulling air back down the exhaust stack and Evan showed me my plumbing clean out trap was leaking as it pulled Seward gas into my house. obviously I had to run it with other basement windows open to keep the house pressure up but very impressed with the price lol
lol, yeah that’s the sign of a good fan! Thanks for sharing your experience, that’s wild how much negative pressure you created with it.
Cheers
Thank you for your video, I was thinking to buy one of these. You mentioned to make sure that there is air coming from the other side of the room because otherwise problems could arise. I was planning to use this one to vent out cooking odors in my kitchen, but the kitchen is located in a dead-end at the end-corner of my long 30-ft dining-living room. The living room has a large window, but again the large window is located about 30-ft away from the kitchen. Do you think that it will be dangerous to use this device to suck out the smelly air from the kitchen? I was hoping that new fresh air would be drawn in from the living room to replace the smelly air that I remove from the kitchen (essentially fresh air travelling outside of the hose in the opposite direction to the smelly air travelling into the hose). After seeing your video, I am now wondering if the device will draw air from the HVAC output located on the kitchen sealing, thus damaging the HVAC... Thank you
Are these suppose to turn off after 10- 15 minutes. Mines keep turning off like it have a cool down period. I wasted my money. I return and my brand new one is turning off also.
Can I connect it to my dust collector. It has 4 inch port though.
I do nails in my sunroom and the smell of the monomer is quite strong can i use this to remove the order without it affecting my furnace. I would be using it like 5 hours a day it would be turn on. Is there one that is not as strong for a small room
@@elbahenriquez9825 you definitely need to be carful with exhausting home air, if you have a hrv or make up air in the house that would be best. But at the very least I would be opening a window while using this unit.
Thanks for the dead battery trick
No prob 👍
Have the same. Just blows the other way round. 😮
@@foodananda really? 😂 that’s too funny I’ve heard guys saying that I was putting it on backwards, but that’s how mine is blowing
im trying to pull cold air from my basement to my bedroom hallway, would it be too loud if the blower is 20+ ft away?
It’s pretty loud, but if you have a door you can close that would be ideal.
The rafter storage area in my garage gets very hot do you think I could put it up there and vent it out a window below ? Thx
Definitely, but you might want to just put in a proper roof vent. Or even a bath fan with high cfm, Hard piped
@@hammerandhome thanks I just don’t feel like cutting my roof this looks like a good alternative if you think it would move the hot air out to the window below
@@JoeFriday-h9n definitely will, it pushes a lot of air fast.
@@hammerandhome thx
If you put a furnace filter on the front of that,you will eventually burn out the motor! It tells you not to obstruct the front of the unit! Due to overheating! Directions/manual!
Yeah that's a terrible idea
Is it possible to attach a dust bag at the end of the pipe?
You might be able to. But I feel like the. Pressure of the fan might force the dust through it. Maybe a furnace filter would work.
Thanks it didn't work. I attached it to my dust collector but due to reduced diameter to 4 inches the fan keeps turning off and starts again in 10 minutes. I don't know how to make the fan to run continuously.
@@nnoor9059 sounds like you might be over heating the fan. Reducing the hose diameter will put a lot of back pressure on the fan. I wouldn’t use it like that.
Does it have variable speed ?
No it’s just one speed.
Why do you show your duct work on opposite side as the manufacturer shows?
Vevor blower, hope this helps #tools #renovation #answeringyourquestions
Where we will get
I got mine on Amazon
Having the hose on the other side (drawing air through the hose) with the fan outside works better for me - also quieter. I'm told it has something to do with back pressure from pushing air through the long hose.
I’ll give it a try, it’s definitely a bit loud.
👍
I have purchased two of these and they shut off after running for about 15 minutes.
Strange, I have no issues with mine. Is your hose straight? If there is back pressure it might cause it to over heat.
Yes they have both been shutting down and there have been slight curves in them but enough to block flow at all.