Hello All,
Ok heres the situation, We had an Enviro EF2I installed at the beginning of the month,, Absolutely love it. my 1200sqft ranch with no cellar, built on a cement slab has never felt warmer.
Until this morning, I did not pay attention to the weather forecast and left my stove on low all night and the oil furnace (forced hot air) kicked on this morning. It is set for 64* as a back up.
A little while later I was ready for work. I went to put my boots on and they are wet,,, I look up and theres water dripping from the ceiling vent. Based on a quick search on Hearth and google I believe what is happening is that nice warm air from the stove is going up in the ductwork in in my unfinished attic, and last night was cold enough for it to condense and then when the furnace kicked on it pushed the water out from the vent.
One thought I had is to run just the furnace fan(no heat) a couple of times a day? or will this just add more warm air in the ductwork and make things worse?
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated
Regards,
Jon
Ok heres the situation, We had an Enviro EF2I installed at the beginning of the month,, Absolutely love it. my 1200sqft ranch with no cellar, built on a cement slab has never felt warmer.
Until this morning, I did not pay attention to the weather forecast and left my stove on low all night and the oil furnace (forced hot air) kicked on this morning. It is set for 64* as a back up.
A little while later I was ready for work. I went to put my boots on and they are wet,,, I look up and theres water dripping from the ceiling vent. Based on a quick search on Hearth and google I believe what is happening is that nice warm air from the stove is going up in the ductwork in in my unfinished attic, and last night was cold enough for it to condense and then when the furnace kicked on it pushed the water out from the vent.
One thought I had is to run just the furnace fan(no heat) a couple of times a day? or will this just add more warm air in the ductwork and make things worse?
Any suggestions would be greatly appreciated
Regards,
Jon