I've got a new room going, and I've got an issue with temps. Bear with me as I give some background, then I'll get to the question...
I have the TD-200S from here:
http://www.hvacquick.com/products/r...ans-for-Bath/S-P-TD-SILENT-Series-Inline-Fans
It's connected to a Can66 filter. As you can see in the image below, one entire wall is made of removable styrofoam panels. This is not how it looks now, but shows the panels. I do not have the ducting installed in this picture. My exhaust ducting comes out through the wall, just to the right of the 240v outlets, then hits a T, then goes into the opening you see in the chimney. There is a 6" T inside the chimney that I connect to. This chimney is unused in the house. The pellet stove and furnace use different vents.

I found a later picture that shows the ducting installed. In the upper left you can see the T. The exhaust then curves down into the Chimney. You can't see the reducer, but it's right where it enters the chimney.

The problem occurs when I "close up" the room. The temps will quickly climb into the 80's, even with the fan running. I built a passive intake into the solid end wall, and I can feel the negative pressure pulling air in through the vent. It will hold up an airfilter with the suction. If I open up one of the panels some, the temps are fine. In fact, the basement is so cold, I can just leave the panels down, with the exhaust fan off, and the room stays around 71F on it's own (with 2 tower fans moving air around)
What I can't tell for sure is if the problem is inadequate intake or exhaust. The fan and ducting are 8" until it hits the chimney. The chimney has a 6" sleeve in it (I didn't know this until I opened it up to connect my ducting). There it goes into a 6" reducer. While I have tried to minimize the number of bends in the ducting, the space requires a few turns along the way. I have a T installed for future expansion. If I take off the end cap, there is a LOT of air moving. Beyond the T is another sharp bend into the 8" to 6" reducer, then another sharp bend to go vertically out of the chimney.
I suspect the problem is how far I am trying to push the air vertically combined with reducing down to the 6" duct. So my question is, can I add another fan inline to "boost" the existing fan? How does this work? Are they additive, or is more like a percentage bonus to CFM?
I'm sure an active intake would help a little, but my intuition says there is too much back pressure for the fan. I open to buying a larger fan. I bought this one because it's so quiet (and it is!), but if it can't push hard enough, well... ya gotta do what ya gotta do
I plan to vent the area outside the flowering room too, eventually, so I can always use this fan for that purpose. Or I can just hold on to it for the second flowering room coming in a few months. I'm planning to use LEDs in that room as a test, so the smaller fan may be enough for that space.
Anyway, sorry for the long winded post. Thanks in advance for any advice or suggestions.
I have the TD-200S from here:
http://www.hvacquick.com/products/r...ans-for-Bath/S-P-TD-SILENT-Series-Inline-Fans
It's connected to a Can66 filter. As you can see in the image below, one entire wall is made of removable styrofoam panels. This is not how it looks now, but shows the panels. I do not have the ducting installed in this picture. My exhaust ducting comes out through the wall, just to the right of the 240v outlets, then hits a T, then goes into the opening you see in the chimney. There is a 6" T inside the chimney that I connect to. This chimney is unused in the house. The pellet stove and furnace use different vents.

I found a later picture that shows the ducting installed. In the upper left you can see the T. The exhaust then curves down into the Chimney. You can't see the reducer, but it's right where it enters the chimney.

The problem occurs when I "close up" the room. The temps will quickly climb into the 80's, even with the fan running. I built a passive intake into the solid end wall, and I can feel the negative pressure pulling air in through the vent. It will hold up an airfilter with the suction. If I open up one of the panels some, the temps are fine. In fact, the basement is so cold, I can just leave the panels down, with the exhaust fan off, and the room stays around 71F on it's own (with 2 tower fans moving air around)
What I can't tell for sure is if the problem is inadequate intake or exhaust. The fan and ducting are 8" until it hits the chimney. The chimney has a 6" sleeve in it (I didn't know this until I opened it up to connect my ducting). There it goes into a 6" reducer. While I have tried to minimize the number of bends in the ducting, the space requires a few turns along the way. I have a T installed for future expansion. If I take off the end cap, there is a LOT of air moving. Beyond the T is another sharp bend into the 8" to 6" reducer, then another sharp bend to go vertically out of the chimney.
I suspect the problem is how far I am trying to push the air vertically combined with reducing down to the 6" duct. So my question is, can I add another fan inline to "boost" the existing fan? How does this work? Are they additive, or is more like a percentage bonus to CFM?
I'm sure an active intake would help a little, but my intuition says there is too much back pressure for the fan. I open to buying a larger fan. I bought this one because it's so quiet (and it is!), but if it can't push hard enough, well... ya gotta do what ya gotta do

Anyway, sorry for the long winded post. Thanks in advance for any advice or suggestions.