Hairy Bob
Well-Known Member
Kinda like me, I always try to over-engineer everything I build just to be safe, it's better than having to build something twice because it wasn't good enough the first time.
That ventilation guide seems a good one, although I was always told to exhaust the volume of air 2-3 times a minute, accounting for ducting and filters, with hps lighting. My exhaust can pull about 2.5x the volume of my room per minute, is thermostatically controlled, and has to run most of the night to keep temps below 26c while the lights are on, so I'm wondering if once every three minutes would be enough tbh.
Oh btw, my intake is sort of a cross between active and passive. It's a light trap made in such a way that it sits behind an oscillating fan, so that's sort of helping the air through, while still allowing as much to come in as goes out, if you get my meaning?
Also one small thing, you say you want to avoid negative pressure as it makes air come out of the gaps, when actually it sucks air in through them. If the pressure in the room is lower than the pressure outside, air will be forced in, not out. If the intake fan were too large then it would create a positive pressure, which is bad. Small amounts of negative pressure are good, too much makes the air thinner and so the fans don't move as many air molecules per cubic foot/metre. You're good though, I can't wait to see it full of juicy buds.
That ventilation guide seems a good one, although I was always told to exhaust the volume of air 2-3 times a minute, accounting for ducting and filters, with hps lighting. My exhaust can pull about 2.5x the volume of my room per minute, is thermostatically controlled, and has to run most of the night to keep temps below 26c while the lights are on, so I'm wondering if once every three minutes would be enough tbh.
Oh btw, my intake is sort of a cross between active and passive. It's a light trap made in such a way that it sits behind an oscillating fan, so that's sort of helping the air through, while still allowing as much to come in as goes out, if you get my meaning?
Also one small thing, you say you want to avoid negative pressure as it makes air come out of the gaps, when actually it sucks air in through them. If the pressure in the room is lower than the pressure outside, air will be forced in, not out. If the intake fan were too large then it would create a positive pressure, which is bad. Small amounts of negative pressure are good, too much makes the air thinner and so the fans don't move as many air molecules per cubic foot/metre. You're good though, I can't wait to see it full of juicy buds.