Later this summer I plan on getting new vinyl flooring throughout the entire home. But I need to somehow address this hole in the floor which was used for the dryer vent. I have no idea how the former owner used this hole. Maybe he just stuck the dryer vent tube right down the hole and had it dandling in the air. I'm thinking it would be better to have some sort of metal or PVC fitting attached to the wood floor that the dryer vent hose could hook onto. Then, below the home, it could be properly vented through the skirting. Has anyone run into this situation before? If you have any photos of how you addressed it, I would love to see.
Thanks!
Fixing dryer vent hole before new flooring
Moderators: Greg, Mark, mhrAJ333, JD
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- Joined: Mon Oct 25, 2010 9:53 pm
- Location: Steuben County, NY
That looks just like mine. The hole is factory. I have the vent tube going down through the hole and to a vent flap mounted in the skirting.
You could plug the hole and run the vent straight out the side wall, or you could use regular vent pipe rather than the flexible tube.
You could plug the hole and run the vent straight out the side wall, or you could use regular vent pipe rather than the flexible tube.
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- Posts: 193
- Joined: Fri Aug 05, 2011 7:34 am
- Location: Norwich, CT
or
just screw it onto the floor
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- Posts: 193
- Joined: Fri Aug 05, 2011 7:34 am
- Location: Norwich, CT
My dryer venting went from a couple feet shy of the marriage seam all the way to an outside wall. And for reasons unknown to me, the compressor unit for the AC was set right in front of the dryer vent outlet. Needless to say, the coils on that side of the compressor unit were caked with lint from the dryer.
I'm not sure of the size - it was either 3" or 4" - but I used a standard PVC flange mount over a piece of pvc. The fit is incredibly tight...and I glued it just to be sure. I left about 4 inches of pipe above the floor - and about 24" to the other side. I poked a small hole in the belly and then stretched the liner so that it was sealed pretty tight against the pvc pipe. I taped the belly to the pipe and then added a circular screw-adjust clamp to secure it all. I added a 45° elbow, a short straight piece and then another 45° elbow to route the exhaust out under my decking and completely away from the AC unit.
I'm not sure of the size - it was either 3" or 4" - but I used a standard PVC flange mount over a piece of pvc. The fit is incredibly tight...and I glued it just to be sure. I left about 4 inches of pipe above the floor - and about 24" to the other side. I poked a small hole in the belly and then stretched the liner so that it was sealed pretty tight against the pvc pipe. I taped the belly to the pipe and then added a circular screw-adjust clamp to secure it all. I added a 45° elbow, a short straight piece and then another 45° elbow to route the exhaust out under my decking and completely away from the AC unit.
Opportunity has a shelf life.
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