Is there anything where i can connect a motorised damper to a 4inch fan extractor for bathroom...so i want the damper to remain open when the electric fan is working on the override..and when the fan stops...the motorised damper shuts?...
I want to set up a Thermostatic bypass to divert the initial cold air back to intake side until it reaches about 70 degrees. Furnace is working fine, but getting a blast of that initial cold air sucks. Maybe a thermostat mounted inside the warm air duct that opens bypass when duct temp is below 70, then closes to give you full force of warm air.
I would like to have an "on off" without temperature control. Either a wall switch, or an app on my android phone to close or open the damper. How can I achieve that? Thanks Much
I have this in my master with a switch on the wall but it quit working. I'd like what you are asking for, from an app close and open them based on need. If you find it let me know
When you close the damper, your AC is still running isn’t it? So you are not really saving any energy at all are you? All you do is cutting the air flow down, causing a liquid refrigerant returning to your compressor and killing it in the process. Dampers are used in conjunction with bypass duct, to maintain the required air volume.
when damper closed, air that supposed to be used for for example room 1 , is being used for other room cooling it quicker and shortening time of running your AC, that`s how you cut on your bill,
If your air conditioning system is centralized system, then it make sense to control individual dampers serving each zone. Of course, easier said than done.
Can you add PID control so that the damper is modulating rather than closing and opening and causing overshoot of temperature in both directions?
That seem very complicated for the everyday Joe. But very detailed.
Is there anything where i can connect a motorised damper to a 4inch fan extractor for bathroom...so i want the damper to remain open when the electric fan is working on the override..and when the fan stops...the motorised damper shuts?...
This is really a nice layout, do you happen to have an updated part list?
I want to set up a Thermostatic bypass to divert the initial cold air back to intake side until it reaches about 70 degrees. Furnace is working fine, but getting a blast of that initial cold air sucks. Maybe a thermostat mounted inside the warm air duct that opens bypass when duct temp is below 70, then closes to give you full force of warm air.
I would like to have an "on off" without temperature control.
Either a wall switch, or an app on my android phone to close or open the damper.
How can I achieve that?
Thanks Much
I have this in my master with a switch on the wall but it quit working. I'd like what you are asking for, from an app close and open them based on need. If you find it let me know
I don't see why you wouldn't be able to wire it to a standard 3 prong outlet plug and plug it into one of those Wifi enabled outlet switches.
I also want that
I just want my dampener to open and close at a set temperature.Can I use a thermostat without all the software?
You can but you'd have to figure out a way to use it in heat or cool modes. These two modes are separate terminals on a thermostat
Yes. You can use a T-87 thermostat without all the stuff he is doing
Cloud based? Really? For a duct lol
@@MakerMark I'm more surprised on why it even needs to be digital, a ptc and ntc along with a transistor and a few resistors is all you need.
nice video sir
can you put a damper on the exhaust smoke pipe of a water heater with a Honeywell wv8840b1109 gas control valve
When you close the damper, your AC is still running isn’t it? So you are not really saving any energy at all are you? All you do is cutting the air flow down, causing a liquid refrigerant returning to your compressor and killing it in the process. Dampers are used in conjunction with bypass duct, to maintain the required air volume.
when damper closed, air that supposed to be used for for example room 1 , is being used for other room cooling it quicker and shortening time of running your AC, that`s how you cut on your bill,
Josef Brunclik you’re an idiot
@@jakegardiner6304 hes correct. you need to make sure there return air room is always active.
If your air conditioning system is centralized system, then it make sense to control individual dampers serving each zone. Of course, easier said than done.
any one has video's link?
120 AC volt, to 24 DC volt