Re: Screening a gas vent?
[Re: andyva]
#3498542
12/20/12 02:28 PM
12/20/12 02:28 PM
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Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 27,520 Georgia
warrior
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Jan 2007
Posts: 27,520
Georgia
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Charles, I am amazed as well as to the differences in areas. Back home in Birmingham, AL the coon in the chimney is an everday occurence, not so same latitude three hours east in Atlanta. I attribute this to two things. One a far smaller raccoon population and second type of construction. Birmingham has far more 60s and 70s ranch styles with MASONRY fireplaces, Atlanta is predominately 70s and newer contemporaries with INSERT fireplaces. This points to an interesting demographic pattern totally off target but in the fifties Birmingham was the boom town of the south growing faster than Atlanta and actually larger at that time the difficulties of the sixties and the advent of Delta moving to Atlanta and the selection of Hartsfield-Jackson as the southeastern international hub followed by the decline of the US steel industry in the seventies spelled the end for Birmingham. I also am of the opinion that the raccoon numbers are directly attributable to the fact that Alabama has far more waterways per square mile (Bham is bisected by one major river, Cahaba, and several major creeks, Village, Valley, Turkey, Five Mile and is adjacent to two other major river systems the Warrior and Coosa) Atlanta is home to only one major river the Chatahoochee and only a few mentionable creeks Peachtree and Whitewater. Several other rivers arise in the metro, Alcovy, Yellow, South and Flint are but of no major consequence within the metro. Back home every area was vunerable to raccoon occupancy in Atlanta I can chart raccoon activity on a map by following the Chatahoochee and Peachtree creek with additional activity occuring in pockets like Stone Mountain. I see squirrels in the inserts here on a regular basis though. Opossums in the attic are a rarity but crawlspaces (almost inevitablely under the tub) are the standard opossum inside the structure call, otherwise it's the opossum in the garbage can or garage. Another oddity, back home in Alabama I could probably count the number of white footed mice (in the attic) on one hand. Here in Hotlanta I get as many of them as I do roof rat or flier, go figure. And another, same latitude between the two and I have never worked a norway rat job in Atlanta (we do have them but very few) but back home norways were equal to the roofs. The only explanation I can surmise is that the direct climatical differences between to two locales is solely due to an elevation difference of 500 feet with Birmingham being taller (an almanac will not reveal this as downtown Bham sits on the bottom of Jones Valley but all surrounding areas are the ridge tops of Red, Shades, Oak and Double Oak mountains plus the plateaus of the ridge and valley to the west and north. This causes an ever so slight but noticable (especially to a gardener like myself) difference in yearly mean temps. Maybe this is just enough difference that the more cooler prefering norways do not thrive in Atlanta. Again only supposition but all known to me norway rat infestations have been on the northside of Atlanta and not in my southern metro areas. Again an elevation difference of 100 feet as you go uphill heading north.
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Re: Screening a gas vent?
[Re: andyva]
#3507888
12/24/12 09:05 AM
12/24/12 09:05 AM
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Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 30 St. Louis area
Dave Schmidt
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Apr 2010
Posts: 30
St. Louis area
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Used to be that ~75% of squirrel entries around here were fascia board above gutters; now, many entry points.
ALL OUT Wildlife Control
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Re: Screening a gas vent?
[Re: andyva]
#3508273
12/24/12 12:48 PM
12/24/12 12:48 PM
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Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 2 Ohio
D_Upchurch
trapper
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trapper
Joined: Mar 2012
Posts: 2
Ohio
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This is called a concentric fitting. It allows for the exhaust and intake to come out of the same hole.
DO NOT put anything over the exhaust of a high efficiency furnace. H-E furnaces make water by cooling the exhaust to a low temperature, this causes water to condense. Anything covering the exhaust will freeze over in really cold weather. This will cause the pressure switch in the furnace to trip off. = You possibly paying for an emergency no heat call. Customer will not be happy to find out that you caused them to have no heat.
I used to do HVAC work. I have been called out on these types of calls, usually in the middle of the night. Customer said they were going to send the bill to the pest control guy. $325.00
I would rather fail at something I love doing than succeed at something I hate. -George Burns.
SIC DIS PARA PACA BELLUM
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