So each clothes dryer appliance has an exit port. You connect a hose to it to vent the damp air to the outside.

I want all dryers to have an intake port so that I can use cold air from the outside for drying. This will keep me from using (expensive) warm air from the inside of my house.

I suspect this will also make the dryer more efficient because the cold incoming air could contain less humidity.

  • Smuuthbrane@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    Change it up completely: heat pump dryer. No exhaust, it uses indoor air, but condenses all the moisture and drains it. No loss of expensive heated indoor air, no humid air being dumped into your home, either.

    • lettruthout@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 months ago

      That’s interesting technology. 'Will seriously consider this when replacing this gas dryer. It only gets used for smalls (we use a clothes line for everything else) so is still in good shape after many years. We’re reducing the amount of gas we use so it’s going to be replaced at some point because of that.

      • evranch@lemmy.ca
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        6 months ago

        This is effectively what my parents do, with a dehumidifier in the basement where they hang their laundry.

        They pre-spin them in in the gas drier for 10min to shake out wrinkles and heat the water in the clothes, then hang dry in the basement beside the dehumidifier.

        A dehumidifier extracts the heat of condensation from water vapour, which is much greater than the amount of energy you would get by simply pumping heat from the outdoor air. That heat warms the basement which helps heat the house as well as dry the clothes further.

        They live in a rainy climate so line drying is unfeasible and the basement needs dehumidification anyways, so it’s a win-win.

  • Mamertine@lemmy.world
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    6 months ago

    Interesting idea.

    Some random thoughts:

    The intake port wouldn’t be desirable in humid climates.

    Though the air outside in winter is dry, it’s also cold. The dryer heater is much less efficient than high efficiency furnaces or newer heat pumps. So while you’d remove the humidity, you’d have to heat the air more.

    It’d be very interesting to see a cost analysis of your idea. Though I believe you’d need one for each climate region.

    • lettruthout@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 months ago

      All points to be considered, but the port could be left unattached to an outside source. Those who don’t want to make use of outside air wouldn’t have to.

  • southsamurai@sh.itjust.works
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    6 months ago

    Wouldn’t fix anything expense wise.

    Back a few years ago, the space where we keep our dryer and washer, plus other things, needed some work done. Since it was only a few weeks, we just moved them to the screened screened in porch.

    If anything, the gas bill went up a little bit, though that could have just been from the door opening more often to the porch. Power bill stayed the same for this time of year.

    It isn’t like a dryer vents enough inside air to matter at bill time compared to having to run longer to heat the air up that little bit longer and/or take longer to get things dry.

    If you want to save money, hang more stuff, save the dryer for things that can’t/won’t dry fast enough to prevent any issues like mildew (happens some in cold weather here, and a lot during really humid days). Thick blankets, heavy jackets, sometimes denim. Or when weather doesn’t allow air drying in bulk.

    You can rig a short line inside for bad days, delicates, and such. Depends on how much space you have as to how much you can hang though.

    Besides, aren’t dryer vent covers and hoses standard sizes? You’d have to deal with that as well, which is secondary to having to extend the intake and cut a second hole of there isn’t an efficient way to combine them.

    You’d be better off trying out one of those indoor vent exhausts, where you just plug the vent hose into what amounts to a filter that keeps the lint from flying everywhere. It achieves the goal of not “wasting” already heated air, and it’ll even use the vented air as heat for wherever the dryer is. You do have to deal with humidity, but winter air tends to be too dry anyway. Positioning the exhaust device well can limit the issues from the humidity.

    There’s even dryer heat exchangers that slightly reduce energy used, and can even be connected to heating for floors or other systems (though I’ve only ever seen one hooked up to an under floor system.

    And, if you fuck around with the dryer, you might be able to rig something yourself. But you’ll likely discover that it’s cramped quarters. Which is part of the reason you don’t often find them connected externally. The fan units are crammed in as they can, and may or may not have an opening in the case of the dryer. You’d likely need to cut wherever on the casing it is, then build your own hose attachment, then run hose to wherever you want to intake air (the only time I’ve seen this done, it was to pull air from attics, where there’s either air heated by the sun, or slightly warmer air from indoor heating seeping through). But it does require some degree of fucking around.

    Trying to manufacture dryers with it by default would make them bigger, more expensive, and not gain any real savings unless it’s coupled with other methods.

    • lettruthout@lemmy.worldOP
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      6 months ago

      Boy what a Downer Debbie response.

      If you want to save money, hang more stuff,

      Yup, good idea. We’ve been doing that for years. The dryer is only run for smalls.

      …and cut a second hole…

      Not a problem in my case. I’d be happy to do it to keep all that air from being pushed out of the house.

      You’d be better off trying out one of those indoor vent exhausts…

      This is not an option for dryers that use gas, if you want to live that is.

      I remain unconvinced and would still like that intake port.

  • Showroom7561@lemmy.ca
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    6 months ago

    so that I can use cold air from the outside for drying.

    But then you’d have to heat the air even more, resulting in more electricity use and added wear on your dryer due to longer cycles.

    I’m willing to bet that any heat lost from inside your house is probably recovered if you open the dryer as soon as it’s done. All the hot air from the dryer is released into your home, as well as the heat still coming off the clothes.