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Air for combustion and ventilation, Continued – Vanguard Heating VS24PR User Manual

Page 6

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DETERMINING AIR FLOW FOR HEATER LOCATION
Determining if You Have a Confined or Unconfined Space

Use this work sheet to determine if you have a confined or unconfined space.

Space:

Includes the room in which you will install heater plus any adjoining rooms with doorless

passageways or ventilation grills between the rooms.

1. Determine the volume of the space (length x width x height).

Length x Width x Height =

___________________

cu. ft. (volume of space)

Example:

Space size 20 ft. (length) x 16 ft. (width) x 8 ft. (ceiling height) = 2560 cu. ft. (volume of space)

If additional ventilation to adjoining room is supplied with grills or openings, add the volume of these
rooms to the total volume of the space.

2. Divide the space volume by 50 cubic feet to determine the maximum Btu/Hr the space can support.

____________ (volume of space)

÷

50 cu. ft. = (Maximum Btu/Hr the space can support)

Example:

2560 cu. ft. (volume of space)

÷

50 cu. ft. = 51.2 or 51,200 (maximum Btu/Hr the space

can support)

3. Add the Btu/Hr of all fuel burning appliances in the space.

Vent-free heater

___________________ Btu/Hr

Gas water heater*

___________________ Btu/Hr

Gas furnace

___________________ Btu/Hr

Vented gas heater

___________________ Btu/Hr

Gas fireplace logs

___________________ Btu/Hr

Other gas appliances*

+ ___________________ Btu/Hr

Total

= ___________________ Btu/Hr

Example:

Gas water heater

40,000

Btu/Hr

Vent-free heater

+

33,000

Btu/Hr

Total

=

73,000

Btu/Hr

* Do not include direct-vent gas appliances. Direct-vent draws combustion air from the outdoors and

vents to the outdoors.

4. Compare the maximum Btu/Hr the space can support with the actual amount of Btu/Hr used.

_________________ Btu/Hr (maximum the space can support)
_________________ Btu/Hr (actual amount of Btu/Hr used)

Example:

51,200

Btu/Hr (maximum the space can support)

73,000

Btu/Hr (actual amount of Btu/Hr used)

The space in the above example is a confined space because the actual Btu/Hr used is more than the
maximum Btu/Hr the space can support. You must provide additional fresh air. Your options are as
follows:

A. Rework worksheet, adding the space of an adjoining room. If the extra space provides an unconfined

space, remove door to adjoining room or add ventilation grills between rooms. See Ventilation Air
From Inside Building,
page 7.

B. Vent room directly to the outdoors. See Ventilation Air From Outdoors, page 7.
C. Install a lower Btu/Hr heater, if lower Btu/Hr size makes room unconfined.

If the actual Btu/Hr used is less than the maximum Btu/Hr the space can support, the space is an uncon-
fined space. You will need no additional fresh air ventilation.

AIR FOR

COMBUSTION

AND

VENTILATION

Continued

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