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Discuss inline shower fan in the Australia area at ElectriciansForums.net

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hi need some advice. Recently fitted a 100mm 20w standard inline shower fan for a very small shower room. the fans stated extraction rate is 90m3 but it appears to have very little suction and the customer is stating that it isnt clearing the room when the shower is in use. Now i have checked the ducting and it appears to be extracting as there are signs of water in the ducting where it attches to the fan. Now is it a case of the fan just not beeing powerfull enough and i need to fit a more powerfull fan ? As i thought 90m3 would be sufficent any ideas please?
 
Marvo's right about making sure that there's a route for allowing air into the room. I cut the bottom off the door, making sure that there's at least half an inch gap.

I tend to go for a high pressure fan of 160 or even 250 cu m /h. The ordinary cheap in-line fans are OK for trickle ventilation but can't really cope with the amount of water vapour produced by a good hot shower. Also make sure that any flexible ducting is as straight as possible with any corrugations pulled out flat. If necessary cut the ducting shorter and pull.
 
a cheap fan kit will only pull upto three meters in length. a vent axia or other quality make will pull much further,but no fan will stop the room steaming up only make it steam up less. if your fan can hold a single piece of toilet paper then thats it working. you get what you pay for
 
...no fan will stop the room steaming up only make it steam up less.
A few years ago I added a 250 cu m /h fan to my own shower room, pulling air from immediately above the shower cubicle, and provided an air inlet to the room. Since then neither of the mirrors in the room steam up. Mind you, there's quite a draught under the door!

The fan is triggered by a flow switch in the pipe feeding the pumped shower head and runs on for a few minutes.
 
A few years ago I added a 250 cu m /h fan to my own shower room, pulling air from immediately above the shower cubicle, and provided an air inlet to the room.

Extracting from directly above the shower would be the best way to go_Obviously you get a lot of condensation through the system so I would make the run-on period as long as 10 minutes if you can to dry it out fully after a shower.
 

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