Don't know for sure,, purely speculation..Just keep in mind a hot chimney on a FLIR display in the summer or spring is going to stand out like a sore thumb. It's not a bad idea though. I saw a write up on venting exhaust out a sewer pipe too....
For me, I'd have to try it and see. I believe most of the furnaces that I've seen are forced air in the burner. It needs to go somewhere so it's blowing into the chimney. I suspect it couldbe overpowered with your vent blower at some point IF it's all the same flue.canon : not to worried about the heat issue. like you say, by the time it goes that distance and everything. but is it safe to use the hole right under the furnace exhaust as long as i run the growroom exhaust fans all the time? i don't want carbon m coming back into the house some way.
Don't know for sure,, purely speculation..
But I'm thinking that by the time it gets thru the duct, up the chimney and out, it wouldbe pretty well cooled?
And definately no more than a gas hot water heater would show (which is probably it's intent when installed?).
I'm thinking of that for the odor mostly. You bring a interesting point though. I wonder how it really would show? Do they pick up that fine a variation in temps?
And do they adjust it that finely (if adjustable)? If so it would probably pick up a gnats ass farting too.
There ya go, at least that would not stand out in the summer. I'm no avionics expert, but I've heard that it costs thousands of dollars per flight hour, so I'm sure that the pilot won't hang around to time your laundry cycles.Just vent out your dryer vent. Every house has one. Every single one emits heat. FLIR scans aren't going to be sitting around for 12+ hours to make sure you aren't just doing laundry, they have better shit to do.
Yeah the flights are really expensive, and so is the equipment, usually when they're doing a scan they're spending at most 5-10 minutes to scan an area and then moving on unless they see something out of the ordinary, in that case they might circle around and call in the coordinates, but if their supervisor finds out they spent an hour circling a house because they saw heat coming from a dryer vent, I'm pretty sure those guys are out of a job.There ya go, at least that would not stand out in the summer. I'm no avionics expert, but I've heard that it costs thousands of dollars per flight hour, so I'm sure that the pilot won't hang around to time your laundry cycles.