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by Retric 1441 days ago
Simplest solution is a high efficiency air to air heat exchanger to let you circulate a lot of outside air. They are less efficient when dealing with high humidity, but you can have this as part of your HVAC system and never really think about it.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Heat_recovery_ventilation

1 comments

Interesting, I don't think I knew that was an option. I'll look into it, thanks.

I rent right now, which means I doubt I can, but hoping to buy soonish.

If you do this (install an HRV), expect it to cost many thousands, and make sure all your duct-work is running through very well insulated spaces, or you will obviate the heat recovery part, and you will just have a very expensive ventilator.
Yeah, I'd assume it'd have to wait until I'm going to replace an hvac system anyway. But in my price-range of homes, that's fairly likely to be ~required anyway.

Sounds like something that would be worth it, I spend almost all of my time indoors and we have pets pumping out co2 as well.

> But in my price-range of homes, that's fairly likely to be ~required anyway.

TTBOMK, there is nowhere in the US that an HRV or ERV is required by code [1], regardless of the price range. There are a lot of very expensive homes built with no thought to indoor air quality.

In many places in the US, due to higher air-tightness requirements, mechanical ventilation is required, but that can be as minimal as having bath fans and a kitchen extractor fan.

1. Ontario CA requires them on new builds https://www.huskyair.com/blog/newsflash-ontario-is-making-hr.... Maybe Germany also?