I have installed a stove in my basement family room (one story ranch). I'm having a nightmare with fire safety codes and distributing heat around the house. My fire department only does comercial construction and my building inspector is not familiar with the topic.
A few things I know, many I don't:
- since the family room is "conditioned space" (warm air) I can do anything with the kitchen stairwell door leading to the the family room. No door is even required. I'm replacing it with a louvered door which solves one area.
- I can add a metallic return from the family room to my furnace return and meet code. I am duct size constricted due to headroom in the basement where the furnace is located (unconditioned space), thus metal all the way. I intend to use a booster fan which comes on when the furnace starts. Currently the "return" os just a plain floor register to the upstairs, using a single hallway return register, no fire damper. This is "grand fathered" but I may replace it anyway.
- The big problem is rooms above the family room with the stove. I plan on picking up ceiling air, using variable speed fans, metal duct and floor registers. My inspector says I need a fire damper (I agree) but has no clue on how to install one. He will approve just about anything I do if it has a fire damper.
Currently I'm planning on a simple setup, floor register, metal register boot, duct fan and a round fire damper at the entrance to this "pickup". I have a non fire rated suspended ceiling to hide all of this (meets code) so I'll add some grills in the suspended ceiling to let air freely move to the pickup.
This seems to make sense to me, the floor opening is just as any heating duct in my home and is cut off should a fire occur via the damper. The fire dampers only have instructions for passing trough a fire rated wall, no information for a setup such as this where they just are picking up room air.
How does such a setup sound? Any references would be appreciated!
gerry
A few things I know, many I don't:
- since the family room is "conditioned space" (warm air) I can do anything with the kitchen stairwell door leading to the the family room. No door is even required. I'm replacing it with a louvered door which solves one area.
- I can add a metallic return from the family room to my furnace return and meet code. I am duct size constricted due to headroom in the basement where the furnace is located (unconditioned space), thus metal all the way. I intend to use a booster fan which comes on when the furnace starts. Currently the "return" os just a plain floor register to the upstairs, using a single hallway return register, no fire damper. This is "grand fathered" but I may replace it anyway.
- The big problem is rooms above the family room with the stove. I plan on picking up ceiling air, using variable speed fans, metal duct and floor registers. My inspector says I need a fire damper (I agree) but has no clue on how to install one. He will approve just about anything I do if it has a fire damper.
Currently I'm planning on a simple setup, floor register, metal register boot, duct fan and a round fire damper at the entrance to this "pickup". I have a non fire rated suspended ceiling to hide all of this (meets code) so I'll add some grills in the suspended ceiling to let air freely move to the pickup.
This seems to make sense to me, the floor opening is just as any heating duct in my home and is cut off should a fire occur via the damper. The fire dampers only have instructions for passing trough a fire rated wall, no information for a setup such as this where they just are picking up room air.
How does such a setup sound? Any references would be appreciated!
gerry
usually the sleeve is heavier gage sheet metal (14 or 16 ga welded) than the duct (24 to 30 ga typ.) which attaches to it, therfore the sleeve has a fire rating as well. So when there is a fire the damper closes and the whole system is rated blocking off the opening in the fire rated floor regardless if the fire gets hot enough to melt or destroy the duct attached to the damper. you may have to have a sleeve made for you, by a local HVAC shop, because the dampers don't typically come with them. also i would get a square or rectangular damper to match the opening you have. FYI a type have the damper in the air stream and b type have it out of the air steram. i hope this info helps!