fnelson487
Well-known member
Well, since I finally got the 906s installed upstairs, I moved the Neptunes to the basement. They have been growling at me ever since. I never did have a true dryer vent setup down there. The 806s that were down there were hooked up to a internal vent since it was electric and my contractor never could figure out how to set up a vent line.
My basement ceiling is filled with HVAC ducting with very litte room for a vent line. The exterior walls are solid brick so he wouldn't even attempt it (chicken.) I really wanted to do a proper venting since the Neptune dryer was gas. I had a 4" vent line running in the ceiling from a bathroom on the other side of the wall from the Neptunes all the way through the basement ceiling and through the brick wall. If I could figure out how to use that line, it would make my life much easier.
The problem was that that vent line was over 35' long. I had this issue in California with a dryer in the middle of the house which sat on a concrete slab. It never was satisfactory. I knew that a long dryer vent line presented problems and did a bit of research (I think I heard about the solution here.) The solution, of course, was a dryer vent booster fan. See below to the link to Fantech. It has a pressure switch that activates the fan when it senses air movement in the vent. Here is a shot of the final installation along with a link to Fantech.

My basement ceiling is filled with HVAC ducting with very litte room for a vent line. The exterior walls are solid brick so he wouldn't even attempt it (chicken.) I really wanted to do a proper venting since the Neptune dryer was gas. I had a 4" vent line running in the ceiling from a bathroom on the other side of the wall from the Neptunes all the way through the basement ceiling and through the brick wall. If I could figure out how to use that line, it would make my life much easier.
The problem was that that vent line was over 35' long. I had this issue in California with a dryer in the middle of the house which sat on a concrete slab. It never was satisfactory. I knew that a long dryer vent line presented problems and did a bit of research (I think I heard about the solution here.) The solution, of course, was a dryer vent booster fan. See below to the link to Fantech. It has a pressure switch that activates the fan when it senses air movement in the vent. Here is a shot of the final installation along with a link to Fantech.
