Garden And Gossip Forums

Full Version: Cunning plan....NOT!
You're currently viewing a stripped down version of our content. View the full version with proper formatting.
Pages: 1 2
My cunning plan was to fit a fan close to my woodburner to hopefully send some heat to a room behind (dining room to living room)

It may have backfired as the woodburner room is toasty but the living room with fan running for  two hours has only raised its temperature by 1/2 a degree! Sick The cost of running the fan for two hours would probably negate any advantage achieved as I was trying to do without lighting the gas fire in that room. Angry

Ah well, there is another half day wasted punching hole through wall and fitting fan. There is dust all over and I will have to spend tomorrow cleaning the mess up. These things are sent to try us! Rolleyes Smile
Friends put a duct in the ceiling above the woodburner so that the hot air went up into the bedroom. Don't think they had a fan in it, just the hot air rising effect.
Might transit sound between the rooms too!!
At least you gave it a go Vinny.
It has raised the temperature 1 degree now but I've knocked it of until I find some way of working out how much that 1 degree lift cost me in electrical power. Cry
The other alternative is to belt a big hole out of the wall or open up a doorway sized hole through. I did warn neighbours that I would be making a bit of a racket this morning and I have a lintel lying round that would do the trick but haven't decided whether I can be arsed or not?  Huh
If you don't want a doorway, what about a serving hatch that you could close with a little door, or a window that might let light through between the 2 rooms?
A doorway would work the heat should pass through to the living room stabilising both rooms and if it didn't you could just keep the door closed.
(24-10-2021, 10:10 PM)Veggie Wrote: [ -> ]If you don't want a doorway, what about a serving hatch that you could close with a little door, or a window that might let light through between the 2 rooms?
A lot of older (50's/60's/70s?) houses had serving hatches and the first thing a new buyer did was block them up! Smile I'm not really worried about the re-sale value as that will be down to my offspring when I snuff it!

The problem, or not as I see it, will be that by adding a doorway or even a cut out in the wall, will be that I can look from the front room to the back room and also out of the French doors which are opposite the woodburner. I still haven't finished tiling the bathroom or sorting the bedrooms yet so the house is going to be full of half completed projects! Rolleyes

Another problem is that there is a double electrical socket in the very area I would like to demolish!
I loved the hatch in our old house - so useful for passing stuff through without leaving the room - not just food.

Stop reading now if you want to stay on topic...................
When I was working, we'd sometimes go out for the evening as a group, maybe a meal but usually a pub crawl. One colleague, I'll call him Dave because that was his name, needed to go to the Gents and, somehow, instead of coming back to the bar, he ended up in the pub kitchen. Whilst we all wondered what was taking him so long to come back, his head emerged from the serving hatch as he tried to crawl out of the kitchen and back to the bar!
We were all laughing and encouraging him to get a wriggle on, the kitchen staff were shouting and swearing at his back end, and the bar staff just stood there wondering how they were going to reach the meals.. Eventually, they pulled him out and we were evicted from the pub.
"Serving hatch" will always remind of Dave stuck in the opening!
You're right Vinny, our 60s house has a serving hatch. Never used for serving but it's useful for watching the telly from the kitchen but the TV volume has to be wound up a bit to enable me to hear it too.
I was in someone's house once that had a log burner and they left the doors open to let the heat spread through the house and this did work
Pages: 1 2