i think you will get away with it, if they are 20 medium sized plants few oz each and there is plently
of room space left without plants in it
since you say air is going to leak out of doors n such, you should just vent it
when you do not control the air it will just sit there and become humid/stale
air does not move unless you direct it and cause a flow due to presure change
air just leaking out of doors will cause wafts of smell to escape, its much better to control airflow in 1 direction
I'm not quite sure what you mean. I will have tents that I will set filters and vents up in, so I'll be growing the plants inside of tents, then venting the air out of the tents into the very large room. From there, the air inside the large room (which shouldn't smell if my carbon filters are working properly) will "leak" out of the door as the heat rises, essentially allowing the heat to gradually escape the large room. Is that what you were understanding, and still think I will have problems with smell, humidity, and CO2? I was thinking that with the large room's door open, and the AC pumping in air, it would force the heat to leave the room periodically.
Would it help if I got a powerful fan and set it in the very back of the room and slightly angled it upward toward the ceiling, and pointed it toward the door? My thinking is that it would pull the cool air from below and blow it slightly upward toward the door, essentially blowing the hot air toward and out the door of the large room as it flows out of the tents. A powerful fan like something like this:
http://www.globalindustrial.com/p/hvac/fans/pedestal/24-tpi-pedestal-fan-non-oscillating-4
The large room my tents will be in is about 3700 cubic feet, and that fan can move 4300 cubic feet of air per minute. Would this be a good way to flush out the heat and let it disperse into the rest of the basement? Would this help humidity and temps? Also, is it a good idea to move that much air inside that space, would it effect CO2 levels too much unless I had the AC pumping new air into the room 100% of the time? Perhaps a weaker fan could get the job done just as nicely and not cause any issues?
Appreciate your thoughts, thanks.
Shamrock,
With a new house, your basement should seal good and hopefully not too humid. It's old basements with cracks and such that tend to leak in high water season.
Darkroom vents are made for old school photographers who develop and print pictures on film and paper. Soon to be a thing of the past I suspect. They are lightproof vents...perhaps 15" square with louvers designed to block light yet allow ventilation. Just passive...no fan. I don't think you'll need any, but Adorama, a NYC mail order place, might still sell them. Cheers,
JD
PS: Dodad, didn't mean to besmirch you...just have no knowledge of those issues.
Ok, that's good to hear. I'm in an area of the country that gets slightly humid outside in the summer months and when it rains, but not too bad. I had another house in the same city and the basement didn't seem humid at all, but I didn't have a meter or anything to know for sure. Lol, I had chapped lips a lot, which people would tell me is because of low humidity?
Good to know about darkroom vents and Adorama, thanks!