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-   -   Anybody know what this is? (http://forums.pelicanparts.com/off-topic-discussions/1025439-anybody-know-what.html)

wdfifteen 04-02-2019 04:13 PM

Anybody know what this is?
 
This thing was on the side of my house. It was in the perfect spot for me to put in the sill cock we were planning for so I took it off. Behind it was a 2" diameter hole in the brick facing.


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1554246579.jpg

It's about 8" by 10"


http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1554246579.jpg


It has a 1 1/2" hole in the back.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1554246579.jpg

It has this long slit in the bottom.

http://forums.pelicanparts.com/uploa...1554246579.jpg

It was screwed to the wall over this 2" hole.

It was permanently attached so I don't think it was a seasonal insulation cover for a sill cock. Plus it is so filled with insulation that there wouldn't be room for one. It looks like some kind of fresh air vent - in or out, I don't know - for a small appliance of some sort.

MRM 04-02-2019 04:30 PM

It looks like a bathroom vent. The plastic cover is designed to let vapor escape but prevent rainwater to enter.

What is directly below the penetration in the masonry wall? Is there a water heater or bathroom? It should not be a furnace vent.

If you use that penetration as the opening for the sillcock you’ll block whatever it is supposed to be venting.

sammyg2 04-02-2019 04:32 PM

Dryer vent?

dad911 04-02-2019 04:32 PM

Does (or did) your house have central vac by chance?

wdfifteen 04-02-2019 04:33 PM

I should have included that it opens into the furnace room. Whatever it vented was piped to it through a 1 1/2 inch pipe, I assume from someplace other than the furnace room.
MRM - there is an electric water heater in the room.

wdfifteen 04-02-2019 04:34 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by dad911 (Post 10414169)
Does (or did) your house have central vac by chance?

I don't think so, but that is an intriguing possibility. Thanks.

MRM 04-02-2019 04:39 PM

Then I think it is a dryer vent. An electric water heater doesn’t need a vent and a high efficiency furnace vent would be extended father out from the wall.

black73 04-02-2019 04:46 PM

Possibly combustion air for furnace.

Jim Richards 04-02-2019 05:04 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by black73 (Post 10414194)
Possibly combustion air for furnace.

That’s my guess, too. Also, the dryer vents I’ve seen are much larger diameter.

wdfifteen 04-02-2019 05:16 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by Jim Richards (Post 10414235)
That’s my guess, too. Also, the dryer vents I’ve seen are much larger diameter.

A 2" dryer vent does seem small, but someone mentioned a mini combo washer/dryer. It's possible there would have been one here, but I don't know what their venting requirements might be.

drkshdw 04-02-2019 05:37 PM

Is your furnace room self contained or closed off? If so, it looks like someone added a roof vent to allow fresh air to come into the room.

Could also be a vent for an ultra-efficient furnace to take outside air to mix with inside air. Something to do with it being easier or more efficient to heat outside cold air than inside temperate air. But that's a relatively new-ish thing.

tcar 04-02-2019 06:05 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by MRM (Post 10414182)
Then I think it is a dryer vent. An electric water heater doesn’t need a vent and a high efficiency furnace vent would be extended father out from the wall.

A 1.5" dryer vent????? Not a chance. They are 4"

A930Rocket 04-02-2019 06:35 PM

No stamps or details on the cover?

Does the mortar used to seal the pipe match the brick mortar? If yes, when was the house built?

A drain wouldn’t have a cover like that. It was protecting something.

Shaun @ Tru6 04-02-2019 07:54 PM

Radon relief vent

Geoz1 04-02-2019 09:21 PM

Quote:

Originally Posted by black73 (Post 10414194)
Possibly combustion air for furnace.

That is correct.


It needs to be re-installed as found. Now he knows how thick that wall is.

drcoastline 04-03-2019 03:40 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by wdfifteen (Post 10414172)
I should have included that it opens into the furnace room. Whatever it vented was piped to it through a 1 1/2 inch pipe, I assume from someplace other than the furnace room.
MRM - there is an electric water heater in the room.

I'd say it it's not a vent but an air supply. Does the furnace room hve a solid or slat door?

cabmandone 04-03-2019 03:51 AM

I'm on board with the central vac intake idea. I would think you'd know for sure though if you had a central vac at some point because unless someone did an extremely thorough job of removing it, you'd have plugs in the wall for connecting the vacuum tube and you'd probably have pipes that just come through the floor and terminate in the basement.. Central vac still seems like the most logical though.

For those asking about the furnace, you wouldn't terminate a furnace intake like that, or at least you shouldn't if you like your furnace to keep operating when it's cold outside.

piscator 04-03-2019 04:51 AM

Entrance to the mouse disco? ;-)

cstreit 04-03-2019 05:54 AM

New furnaces require fresh air inlet.. Could have been one of those too...

wdfifteen 04-03-2019 06:20 AM

Quote:

Originally Posted by drcoastline (Post 10414582)
I'd say it it's not a vent but an air supply. Does the furnace room hve a solid or slat door?

The furnace room opens into the garage. Its a big space. Anyway, it's a brand new furnace with piped in combustion air. The first furnace in the house (built in 1971) would have needed combustion air, but it's only a 2" hole. That's not much air.


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