The Pros and Cons of Direct Air for a Wood Stove (when there’s no mandatory requirement)

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Krome10

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Hi all

I know there are a lot of people who have wood stoves on this forum, so perhaps it will be useful to someone now or in the future....

Direct air / External air…

Additional air requirements are mandatory for stoves above 5kW in older houses, and for any stoves in newer houses (post-2008) or houses with an air permeability of 5 m3/hm2 or less. I can understand the logic in having DA when the alternative would be an air vent (hole in the wall); although even then there are arguments on both sides. But putting that aside a moment, when no additional air requirements are needed for a stove, is DA still a worthwhile option? I’ve spent the day reading up on this and thought I’d post what I’ve found, as much to share my research as to get feedback and thoughts from people if anyone is interested in discussing it.

***In Favour of DA***
- Draughts.
There are quite a few people on the internet who can’t say enough good things about DA and highly recommend using it whenever possible to reduce draughts and cold air in the room. It’s an enticing idea! However, I did notice that this is usually as opposed to having to have an air vent. When the alternative to DA is no air vent (for a 5kW or less stove), I’m not so sure how many of these people would still recommend it.
- Draughts – Anecdotes. That being said, I found instances where people were saying they used to have a stove which took air from the room, they weren’t happy with the draughts being created, and so retrofitted a DA feed and it made a world of difference.
- Wasting Heated Air. Some say that without DA, you are wasting air in the room that has already been heated and replacing it with cold air. This quote sums it up: “…I would definitely fit a direct air supply not only [for] the prevention of draughts but for the conservation of heat. Using room air you would be using air already heated and a wood burner will use a considerable amount of combustion air out of the room you have heated.” REBUTTAL: However, stoves actually use quite a small amount of air when compared to the average standard air changes required in a room. The air changes will have to happen one way or another, so unless MVHR is used, won’t hot air still have to be replaced with a fresh cold supply regardless?
- Colder Air Burns Better. Quote: “The colder the air – the denser it is and more oxygen per unit volume it contains, so it must be good to assist combustion.” REBUTTAL: However, I’m sure I’ve also heard the opposite, that colder denser air is detrimental to combustion. Not sure which is right.
- Cold Air Expands When Heated. The claim therefore is that this can assist chimney draw as it is taken away up the flue.
- Control. Although DA means less air changes compared to air from the room, it means you have more control over when you ventilate the house. IE – opening windows in the morning, or before going out. You can control the ventilation, and separate the times to ventilate from the times to heat. Also, you can introduce more ventilation when required due to the weather (damp days) and less when not (dry crisp days). As one person puts it, “Using the stove air to ventilate, means you wouldn't ventilate the right amount at the right time.”

I thought this article was particularly useful in highlighting benefits, although note the “conditions” on page 2.
https://mtbest.net/wp-content/uploads/sites/12/2023/02/cold-air-intake-1.pdf



***Against DA***
- Simply Not Needed.
Many people claim DA is not necessary, for various reasons. Also, all of the installers and stove shops I have spoken to (which is quite a few!) have unanimously said not to bother and that we would not gain anything. The “Outdoor Air Myth Exposed” article – link below – claims that it has been studied and DA (or even just air vents) are most often of no benefit.
- Stoves Don’t Create Draughts. Some say it is not true that you feel draughts. They say to try putting your hand by the stove’s air inlet, where the air is being sucked through a small aperture and should therefore be the aggregate of all air being pulled. If there were draughts you would feel it there, but you don’t.
- Cold Air Cools the Stove. Pulling cold air directly into the stove will be worse for combustion and will cool the internal temperature of the firebox.
- Cold Air When Not in Use. The duct will be cold and will emit cold air, especially when the stove is not in use (or even when the stove is in use, to be fair, as it’s still sucking in cold air). Thermal bridge to outdoors.
- DA is Worse for Ventilation and Humidity. If the stove takes air from the room, it encourages more air changes in the house. This in turn can increase ventilation and help with humidity too. Outside air is almost always drier/lower RH, so frequent air changes help.
- MVHR. Of those people who think DA is a good idea, they sometimes add that MVHR is needed too for air changes. Without MVHR, some say it’s best to vent the stove from the room air. I don’t and won’t have MVHR, so that’s an “against” for me.
- Wind and External Air Pressure (Backdraught) Problems. If the wind is at a particular strength and direction it can cause smoke to blow back into the room, as well as CO. It can also make it difficult to start the stove. Unpredictable and variable. There can also be a potential fire risk if the reversal of the flue system flow results in the hot gases being expelled from the DA intake. Also, if mechanical extraction in the house de-pressurises more than the chimney draw, smoke and gases can be drawn out of the stove and into the room. REBUTTAL: See “cold-air-intake” pdf (link above). He says to have the external vent positioned in a place where there will be no wind (consistent known pressure), which would deal with this problem. If that’s not possible, I wonder is something like the DR21 could help with this?
- Air from Below Stove (and Entry Into Ash Pan Area). See “cold-air-intake” pdf (link above). He states that the DA needs to be supplied from below the fire as a requirement for it to be effective. This is not possible for many wood only stoves as they have no ash pan.
- More Money! Kits are often £100+. Fitting will add to the bill as well (unless DIYing).
- Historic Precedent. It’s not how they used to do it in the old days! Older houses need older methods?

The strongest article I found arguing DA – and air vents in general – and claiming that studies have proved it:
https://www.woodheat.org/the-outdoor-air-myth-exposed.html


I appreciate the post is long, and probably quite boring! So feel free to ignore it; although if you've got this far then I guess it's a bit late to say that! But if it interests anyone, I’d love to hear your thoughts, arguments and agreements. Personal experiences always great to hear as well.

Cheers
 
The ‘colder air is denser/more oxygen’ bit is true - simple physical chemistry and also the basis of intercoolers.

Open fire - cheers the heart, freezes the back and warms the sky. A room-air wood stove is a choked-down version. I can certainly feel cold draughts from sockets and skirting when ours is blazing away.

With regards to benefits of room air for air changes, well, your room should be ventilated properly anyway - you won’t have the wood stove on all the time. Direct air (or balanced flue) makes a lot of sense.
 
My take on it - modern houses are quite well sealed. You can't run a fire which is taking air out of the room without a place for air to come in.

I get a similar thing with my bathroom fan. It is reasonably powerful and I can hear the change when i open the door. When the door is closed the fan is fighting to pull air into the room under the small gap under the door. when i open it the fan sound changes as it is more easily able to pull air through.


Old houses had floor boards with gaps, gaps around the skirting, poor door sealing, poor window sealing. New houses are caulked to the max and are designed to have very little direct air flow.

Some of stoves I've looked at say that it's ok without venting as they are ~4kw. Once you start getting higher output they need more air flow.
 
When I had cavity wall insulation put in the installers insisted that I have a four inch hole drilled through the wall in the two rooms with a stove. As I immediately blocked them off and the stoves had worked ok for years without the holes I wonder if my house is too leaky.

I have done a lot of reading on MVHR as I live in a bungalow and putting the ducting in would not be a big issue. The general advice is that the house needs to be reasonably airtight to for MVHR to work but without specifying how airtight. I think my house is reasonably air tight but the two stoves would need an external air supply which would mean replacing them. I think I am now too old to gain the benefit from MVHR installation especially as I am trying to persuade SWMBO to downsize. Also with three dogs the doors are always being opened, I have not managed to train the dogs to also close them :(
 
Good synopsis and comments but no 3rd party can assess your actual installation. Lots of variables like size and shape of room, where you sit, what you use the stove for, what the house is like, how many hours a day or week is it occupied.

To illustrate that, up to 5 years ago we used our wood burner a lot, most days from late Dec to mid Feb. A long narrow room, windows opposite the stove, sofa near windows, and it always felt cooler behind the furniture as the stove drew air in from that side. A vent by the stove or DA would have been a real benefit, never got round to it.

Now, new windows, new ch boiler, better controls, new radiators where they mattered, whole house much warmer and cheaper to run. The wood burner only gets used a few times a year now in very cold weather, though is a useful reserve if we get power cuts, and makes the room so hot we have the internal door open and all the window vents open. DA wouldn't now be good value for money.

The main benefit of da might be controllability I suppose, stove door vents are always a bit approximate.

So same theory applies but a different practical situations. Maybe ask yourself how you use your wood burner and is simple good enough. If it's your main source of heat maybe spend to optimise it.
 
Have had various stoves over the years, non with air inlet or DA. Can't say I've noticed the draw causing a draught. The biggest rated at 12kw in a large room which was "leaky" in that the window opening lights had no seals, just wood on wood in a rebate. No draughts even with fire on full blast when starting up.
Might be different in a very modern house with draught excluders everywhere, but I'd look at removing some seals rather having a vent or DA - air needs extracting anyway.
I can't imagine a vent being necessary unless you had a very large bio-mass boiler in a small room
 
My take on it - modern houses are quite well sealed. You can't run a fire which is taking air out of the room without a place for air to come in.

I get a similar thing with my bathroom fan. It is reasonably powerful and I can hear the change when i open the door. When the door is closed the fan is fighting to pull air into the room under the small gap under the door. when i open it the fan sound changes as it is more easily able to pull air through.

This.
40 year old house but with the usual upvc retrofit.
Turn on the cooker hood which is vented to outside and you hear the load on the fan drop when you open a kitchen window to let fresh air in.
If you don't and the kitchen door is open it'll pull warm air from the rest of the house and blow that out instead.
 
You can feel the draught at my parents house when the fire is on. They have a 12kw I think. windows and doors the other side of the room.

When I re-did my fireplace I put a 100mm pipe down through into the underfloor space with the vent under the back of the fire. I don't notice any draught so it must be pulling air through that and into the fire and is likely to do that more when I fit a better sealed front door.
 
I recently moved from an old property in which I installed a stove and to comply with the prevailing regs - it was 6.5Kw rated I either had to have a fixed air supply vent or use DA.
Given that I lived in an exposed and often windy location I certainly did not want a fixed open vent on either of the external walls of my living room so I opted for the DA option which my stove supported and it worked well - no draughts at all.
Only issue I did have was to ensure my kitchen hood extractor was not running whilst attempting to light the fire - the living/kitchen was open-plan, since the powerful extractor would preferentially rob the DA supply..
 

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