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by throw0101b
776 days ago
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> What matters is that you have a _PROPER_ range hood. One that vents outside and one that isn't integrated into a microwave oven. Not wrong, but given how many people have an 'improper' range hood, or a proper one that is never used (often because it is "too loud), or no range hood whatsoever (a common situation in rentals), you're stuck with chemicals in your home. > Whether you're cooking on gas or electric at that moment really doesn't matter. Yes it does: all cooking will generate chemicals, but you're adding extra ones by using a combustible heat source. |
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(Modern codes mostly require some form of makeup air mechanism for a hood rated 400cfm or higher. I’ve never seen a residential kitchen with an actual working setup like this, although it’s common in a well designed commercial kitchen. What actually happens is that lower end / smaller residential kitchens often have combination microwave/hood units, and they work very poorly. Large / high end residential kitchens end up with standalone hoods with far too much flow, poorly sealed ducts, crappy loud blowers, and no makeup air. If you enter the parameters of a residential stove into a commercial kitchen ventilation calculator, you end up with a rather small flow rate, and the high end residential brands love to advertise much larger numbers.)