Can I use a home office / furnace room for my grow?

Lockedin

Well-Known Member
OP,

My 4x4 is in my home office.
Negatives:
Fan drone
Temptation - tough to work in there now! :D

I don't deal with much heat, but still use an intake fan / duct and a filtered exhaust.

If lint is a concern, using a hose clamp, secure a thin-ish piece of foam rubber on the intake side of on your intake duct. Make sure it's thin enough to avoid stressing your fan.
 

BurntByFire

Active Member
I’d say make sure you have negative pressure at all times and a good exhaust fan with carbon filter and you’re good to go. Otherwise your plants will become your new Scentsy
 

Cookie Rider

Well-Known Member
Be aware of pulling in your furnace exhaust fumes, or gas hot water tanks exhaust fumes.
If your venting outside your good, but if your venting back into the room just to scrub smells say,
You could be putting carbon monoxide (not co2) back into your room.
 

Relic79

Well-Known Member
Be aware of pulling in your furnace exhaust fumes, or gas hot water tanks exhaust fumes.
If your venting outside your good, but if your venting back into the room just to scrub smells say,
You could be putting carbon monoxide (not co2) back into your room.
I don't believe this is correct. If you create negative pressure near the inlet of a gas appliance and it stops drafting in the correct direction, or venting enough, the combustion becomes inefficient and it produces carbon monoxide fvrom the unspent oxygen which is then drawn back into the building.

If you take air in from that room and vent it back into the same room, the pressure differential is the same but your heat and small would get drawn into the cold air return or cracks around it.

If you take air from that room and vent it outside that room, depending on how well it is sealed, the room will be under negative pressure which could pull air and exhaust back in through the furnace causing carbon monoxide if the flu is the easiest path to pull air back into the room.

If you vent completely outside your house, you will put your entire house under negative pressure and depending on how air tight your home is, you will pull air in through door cracks, window cracks, exhaust vents, and potentially again gas appliance exhausts again causing carbon monixide, and environmental pollutants like pollen, dust, etc.

This is why balancing air flow in and out of houses such that it is generally positive rather than negative is important. It may never happen, and you might be venting so much air outside your home it takes any CO out with it. I can't really say or know this would happen, just that this is my understanding.

I'm happy to be corrected if I have this wrong, I never really questioned my HVAC/Gas buddy when he explained it to me a long time ago.

upon rereading @Cookie Rider 's post, I think we are saying the same thing in different ways. Cookie is saying if you are causing negative pressure but venting outsdie, the Carbon Monoxide should be vented out too. All I was really saying I guess was that it is the negative pressure that is causing the Carbon Monoxide in the first place. Either way, just thought I'd add my noise to the post.
 
Last edited:

thumper60

Well-Known Member
So I was going to setup a small tent in my home office for my new grow.
My home office borders on to the laundry room/furnace room with no door currently.

I was thinking maybe I should skip the tent and just grow in the room. I could even add a door to the furnace room.

Can I just put my lights in my room and work in there or will that be oppressively bright/humid?

Does a furnace suck in room air such that I can't filter the smells if I were exhausting that room?


Or maybe there is a different reason I don't want to spend too much time in there :|
If you furnace is direct vent you will be fine, If its a B vent you will pull fumes into the house by venting that close.
 

Roger A. Shrubber

Well-Known Member
i took the smaller room in my two bedroom house as my bedroom, and use the larger one as my grow room, because the inside part of the heat pump is in the smaller bedroom, and i didn't want to have to move everything if it needed repaired. if it's legal where you are, not a problem, but it's still frowned upon here
 
Top