16
AIR REQUIREMENTS
Breathing Hazard - Carbon Monoxide Gas
Install water heater in accordance with
the Instruction Manual and NFPA 54 or
CAN/CSA-B149.1.
To avoid injury, combustion and ventilation
air must be taken from outdoors.
Do not place chemical vapor emitting
products near water heater.
Breathing carbon monoxide can cause brain damage or
death. Always read and understand instruction manual.
For safe operation, an adequate supply of fresh
uncontaminated air for combustion and ventilation must
be provided.
An insufficient supply of air can cause recirculation of
combustion products resulting in contamination that may
be hazardous to life. Such a condition often will result
in a yellow, luminous burner flame, causing sooting of
the combustion chamber, burners, and flue tubes, and
creates a risk of asphyxiation.
Do not install the water heater in a confined space unless
an adequate supply of air for combustion and ventilation
is brought in to that space using the methods described
in
(page 16) that follows later in this
manual.
Never obstruct the flow of ventilation air. If you have any
doubts or questions at all, call your gas supplier. Failure
to provide the proper amount of combustion air can result
in a fire or explosion and cause property damage, serious
bodily injury or death.
UNCONFINED SPACE
An
unconfined space
is one in which the volume is not
less than 50 cubic feet per 1,000 Btu/hr (4.8 cubic meters
per kW) of the total input rating of all appliances installed
in the space. Rooms communicating directly with the
space in which the appliances are installed, through
openings not furnished with doors, are considered a part
of the unconfined space.
Makeup air requirements for the operation of exhaust
fans, kitchen ventilation systems, clothes dryers and
fireplaces shall also be considered in determining the
adequacy of a space to provide combustion, ventilation
and dilution air.
UNUSUALLY TIGHT CONSTRUCTION
In unconfined spaces in buildings, infiltration may be
adequate to provide air for combustion, ventilation and
dilution of flue gases. However, in buildings of unusually
tight construction (for example, weather stripping, heavily
insulated, caulked, vapor barrier, etc.) additional air must
be provided using the methods described in that follows.
CONFINED SPACE
A
confined space
is one in which the volume is less than
50 cubic feet per 1,000 Btu/hr (4.8 cubic meters per kW)
of the total input rating of all appliances installed in the
space.
Openings must be installed to provide fresh air for
combustion, ventilation and dilution in confined spaces.
The required size for the openings is dependent on the
method used to provide fresh air to the confined space
and the total Btu/hr input rating of all appliances installed
in the space.
DIRECT VENT APPLIANCES
Appliances installed in a
direct-vent
configuration
that derives all air for combustion from the outdoor
atmosphere through sealed intake air piping are not
factored in the total appliance input Btu/hr calculations
used to determine the size of openings providing fresh air
into confined spaces.
EXHAUST FANS
Where exhaust fans are installed, additional air shall be
provided to replace the exhausted air. When an exhaust
fan is installed in the same space with a water heater,
sufficient openings to provide fresh air must be provided
that accommodate the requirements for all appliances
in the room and the exhaust fan. Undersized openings
will cause air to be drawn into the room through the
water heater’s vent system causing poor combustion.
Sooting, serious damage to the water heater and the risk
of fire or explosion may result. It can also create a risk of
asphyxiation.
LOUVERS AND GRILLES
The free areas of the fresh air openings in the
instructions that follow do not take in to account the
presence of louvers, grilles or screens in the openings.
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