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Author Washer and Dryer Installation and relocation
Zoomer

2008-02-10, 9:25 pm

We have just purchased a new washer and dryer. We had the store come
and install them. They installed them just as the water lines and the
exhaust vent it on the wall. The dryer on the left, and the washer on
the right. The issue is, the pair are front loading, and the
directions the doors open are inefficient the way they washer and
dryers are sitting . We have to go around both doors to move the
clothes from the washer to the dryer. In other words the doors open
side by side rather than on opposite sides.

Here is my question...

Would it be an issue for the exhaust vent if i flip-flopped the two?
I could run the vent pipe to the opening with no problem, but I don't
want the extra length slowing down the exhaust where it won't vent
properly.

Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.

S. Christopher
Malcolm Hoar

2008-02-10, 9:25 pm

In article <a949cef8-5af9-456b-8f49-a78add292dfe@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com>, Zoomer <schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote:

>Would it be an issue for the exhaust vent if i flip-flopped the two?
>I could run the vent pipe to the opening with no problem, but I don't
>want the extra length slowing down the exhaust where it won't vent
>properly.


An extra two or three feet of straight run isn't going to
be a significant issue. It may have an impact on the drying
efficiency if you have to make a really tight "S" with the
vent pipe. Again, probaly not too much of an issue if the
total length of the vent (to the outside) is very short.

My own dryer vent has a couple of right angle bends and
then runs another 12 feet through the crawlspace to reach
the outside. That's not ideal but it seems to work quite
well.


--
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| Malcolm Hoar "The more I practice, the luckier I get". |
| malch@malch.com Gary Player. |
| http://www.malch.com/ Shpx gur PQN. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Malcolm Hoar

2008-02-10, 9:25 pm

In article <foodpra1e4002malch@news.sonic.net>, malch@malch.com (Malcolm Hoar) wrote:
>In article <a949cef8-5af9-456b-8f49-a78add292dfe@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com>,
> Zoomer <schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote:
>
>
>An extra two or three feet of straight run isn't going to
>be a significant issue. It may have an impact on the drying
>efficiency if you have to make a really tight "S" with the
>vent pipe. Again, probaly not too much of an issue if the
>total length of the vent (to the outside) is very short.
>
>My own dryer vent has a couple of right angle bends and
>then runs another 12 feet through the crawlspace to reach
>the outside. That's not ideal but it seems to work quite
>well.


A couple more thoughts. What I would do is:

1. Run the dryer and then go outside to feel the air flow
coming out of the event.

2. Swap the dryer position and repeat step 1.

You should be able to feel the difference if it's really
degraded the airflow. Obviously it would be better to
take a real measurement if you just happen to have
a suitable instrument to hand (like a hot wire anenometer).

Keep in mind that each bend will reduce the flow as well
as providing a point for lint to accumulate. With more
bends, clean the vent more frquently.

--
|~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~|
| Malcolm Hoar "The more I practice, the luckier I get". |
| malch@malch.com Gary Player. |
| http://www.malch.com/ Shpx gur PQN. |
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Rick Blaine

2008-02-11, 3:25 am

Zoomer <schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote:

>Would it be an issue for the exhaust vent if i flip-flopped the two?
>I could run the vent pipe to the opening with no problem, but I don't
>want the extra length slowing down the exhaust where it won't vent
>properly.


No, as long as the vent pipe isn't crimped, you shouldn't have any problem. You
may want to ask your dealer if the door hinge side can be swapped though. Dryers
frequently have this as an option. Washer may have.
Pat

2008-02-11, 3:25 am


"Rick Blaine" <dont@bother.com> wrote in message
news:7rhvq39hg8kd9fvq6aq3ioenqoc9tou2r3@4ax.com...
> Zoomer <schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote:
>
>
> No, as long as the vent pipe isn't crimped, you shouldn't have any
> problem. You
> may want to ask your dealer if the door hinge side can be swapped though.
> Dryers
> frequently have this as an option. Washer may have.


It is also possible sometimes to order new with the doors hinged in the
manner you wish.


news

2008-02-11, 3:25 am

the doors can be switched to open the other way, just
look in the owners manual...should take you 30 minutes



"Zoomer" <schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote in message
news:a949cef8-5af9-456b-8f49-a78add292dfe@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
> We have just purchased a new washer and dryer. We had the store come
> and install them. They installed them just as the water lines and the
> exhaust vent it on the wall. The dryer on the left, and the washer on
> the right. The issue is, the pair are front loading, and the
> directions the doors open are inefficient the way they washer and
> dryers are sitting . We have to go around both doors to move the
> clothes from the washer to the dryer. In other words the doors open
> side by side rather than on opposite sides.
>
> Here is my question...
>
> Would it be an issue for the exhaust vent if i flip-flopped the two?
> I could run the vent pipe to the opening with no problem, but I don't
> want the extra length slowing down the exhaust where it won't vent
> properly.
>
> Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
>
> S. Christopher



S. Barker

2008-02-11, 9:25 am

I'm just kind of curious as to why the house was set up wrong to beging
with. The dryer is always on the right.

s

"Zoomer" <schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote in message
news:a949cef8-5af9-456b-8f49-a78add292dfe@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
> We have just purchased a new washer and dryer. We had the store come
> and install them. They installed them just as the water lines and the
> exhaust vent it on the wall. The dryer on the left, and the washer on
> the right. The issue is, the pair are front loading, and the
> directions the doors open are inefficient the way they washer and
> dryers are sitting . We have to go around both doors to move the
> clothes from the washer to the dryer. In other words the doors open
> side by side rather than on opposite sides.
>
> Here is my question...
>
> Would it be an issue for the exhaust vent if i flip-flopped the two?
> I could run the vent pipe to the opening with no problem, but I don't
> want the extra length slowing down the exhaust where it won't vent
> properly.
>
> Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
>
> S. Christopher



Phisherman

2008-02-11, 9:25 am

On Sun, 10 Feb 2008 18:44:23 -0800 (PST), Zoomer
<schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote:

>We have just purchased a new washer and dryer. We had the store come
>and install them. They installed them just as the water lines and the
>exhaust vent it on the wall. The dryer on the left, and the washer on
>the right. The issue is, the pair are front loading, and the
>directions the doors open are inefficient the way they washer and
>dryers are sitting . We have to go around both doors to move the
>clothes from the washer to the dryer. In other words the doors open
>side by side rather than on opposite sides.
>
>Here is my question...
>
>Would it be an issue for the exhaust vent if i flip-flopped the two?
>I could run the vent pipe to the opening with no problem, but I don't
>want the extra length slowing down the exhaust where it won't vent
>properly.
>
>Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
>
>S. Christopher



Always better to limit the number of bends in the exhaust. Bends tend
to collect dust. If you swap the locations and clean out the exhaust
twice a year, it should not matter. The switching of hinges is the
best idea.
Blattus Slafaly £ ¥ 0/00 :)

2008-02-11, 9:25 am

Zoomer wrote:
> We have just purchased a new washer and dryer. We had the store come
> and install them. They installed them just as the water lines and the
> exhaust vent it on the wall. The dryer on the left, and the washer on
> the right. The issue is, the pair are front loading, and the
> directions the doors open are inefficient the way they washer and
> dryers are sitting . We have to go around both doors to move the
> clothes from the washer to the dryer. In other words the doors open
> side by side rather than on opposite sides.
>
> Here is my question...
>
> Would it be an issue for the exhaust vent if i flip-flopped the two?
> I could run the vent pipe to the opening with no problem, but I don't
> want the extra length slowing down the exhaust where it won't vent
> properly.
>
> Any help with this would be greatly appreciated.
>
> S. Christopher


Get a laundry basket on wheels. I don't know why people have all these
labor savings devices and then get stuck in traffic on the way to the
gym to work out. ?? Work while you live and save. Climb some stairs and
skip the elevator. Put the washer on the opposite wall of the dryer and
carry the laundry across the floor. Heaven forbid you break a sweat.

--
Blattus Slafaly ? 3 7/8
Phisherman

2008-02-11, 1:25 pm

My dryer is on the left. The connections were installed that way by
the builder, but I did not buy a washer/dryer set with doors that open
to the side.

"S. Barker" <ichasetrains@coldmail.com> wrote:

>I'm just kind of curious as to why the house was set up wrong to beging
>with. The dryer is always on the right.
>
>s
>
>"Zoomer" <schristopher@struthers-dunn.com> wrote in message
>news:a949cef8-5af9-456b-8f49-a78add292dfe@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
>

sylvan butler

2008-02-11, 5:25 pm

On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 07:40:54 -0600, S. Barker <ichasetrains@coldmail.com> wrote:
> I'm just kind of curious as to why the house was set up wrong to beging
> with. The dryer is always on the right.


My dryer is on the left.

sdb
--
What's seen on your screen? http://PcScreenWatch.com
sdbuse1 on mailhost bigfoot.com
Bob M.

2008-02-11, 9:25 pm

"S. Barker" <ichasetrains@coldmail.com> wrote in message
news:3-6dnT6RNsmmzS3anZ2dnUVZ_q2hnZ2d@giganews.com...
> I'm just kind of curious as to why the house was set up wrong to beging
> with. The dryer is always on the right.
>
> s
>


....except in places such as mine where the vent is on the left. It's not
wrong.

KLS

2008-02-11, 9:25 pm

On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 14:41:42 -0700, sylvan butler
<ZsdbUse1+noZs_0802@Zbigfoot.Zcom.invalid> wrote:

>On Mon, 11 Feb 2008 07:40:54 -0600, S. Barker <ichasetrains@coldmail.com> wrote:
>
>My dryer is on the left.


So's ours. Not our preference, but cheaper/easier to deal with that
than run the natural gas line another 10 ft. to enable the right-hand
angle (not to mention redoing the glass block for a similarly closer
exhaust vent). House was built before these kinds of dryers; they
didn't know.
Big_Jake

2008-02-11, 9:25 pm

On Feb 11, 7:40 am, "S. Barker" <ichasetra...@coldmail.com> wrote:[color=darkred]
> I'm just kind of curious as to why the house was set up wrong to beging
> with. The dryer is always on the right.
>
> s
>
> "Zoomer" <schristop...@struthers-dunn.com> wrote in message
>
> news:a949cef8-5af9-456b-8f49-a78add292dfe@e10g2000prf.googlegroups.com...
>
>
>
>
>

No, the dryer is on top! :-)

JK
LinkBot





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