Range Hood Question
 

Range Hood Question

Started by Glennman, August 17, 2022, 09:27:48 PM

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Glennman

I see some RVs have vented range hoods. Some are probably vented to the outside, some recirculating. I know the recirculating ones have a certain value as grease would collect on the screens and would subsequently be cleaned. The ones that vent outdoors both collect grease and vent smoke to the outdoors, which I think is very desirable, similar to what I have in my house. Most building codes require a kitchen to have ventilation to the exterior, but not necessarily via a range hood. People can install a fan in the ceiling and accomplish the ventilation requirement. I suppose the Fantastic Fan (or whichever) would be equivalent to a typical kitchen fan mounted at the ceiling.

Are you bus converters or owners out there installing range hoods; are they vented to the exterior; recirculating; none at all; or are you only relying on the ceiling mounted exhaust (?). I'm thinking the ceiling exhaust fan is sufficient, especially when I research the cheap junk that is available out there.

dtcerrato

We have an over the stove/oven outdoor vented range hood with lighting & 2 speed fan - it expells most of the heat & cooking aromas before they "get away". We also have powered vent hoods in the ceiling. They work great to get the popcorn smell out when microwaving as the stove hood don't catch that. The two different hoods have different purposes. Code? Whats that? Lol
Dan & Sandy
North Central Florida
PD4104-129 since 1979
Toads: 2009 Jeep GC Limited 4X4 5.7L Hemi
             2008 GMC Envoy SLT 4x4 4.2L IL Vortec

buswarrior

 The further that cooking gases, grease, moisture, steam and stink goes, the more of the coach permanently picks up the stink.

Range hoode and external exhaust catches it all as early as possible.

Old buses stink for a number of "unknown" reasons...

This source is known...

Defeat it!!

Happy coaching!
Buswarrior
Frozen North, Greater Toronto Area
new project: 1995 MCI 102D3, Cat 3176b, Eaton Autoshift

richard5933

I've had three different iterations of cook top venting...

1) Our 4106 had a Jenn Air range with down-draft venting. There was a pop-up 'vent hood' at the rear of the cook top, with an extractor fan below the counter top. The air exited out the bottom through the bay and then through the floor of the bay. An oil-catch jar was in the system.

2) Our 4108 had a 6-inch 120v exhaust fan on the ceiling over the range, as well as a 12v MaxxAir fan a few feet away.

3) Our Airstream has an externally-vented range hood over the cook top.

Of all three, the Jenn Air out-performed the others hands down. Not only did it do a great job of removing the odor, grease, heat, etc. it did it all without having to mount anything over the cook top. If I were to design a bus from scratch it would be my first choice, but not sure if they can be retrofitted easily.

The Airstream's traditional externally-vented range hood works well. It does exactly what you'd expect and is very similar to a household unit. There are pre-made external vent covers with a lockable flapper that make these easy to install.

The ceiling vents in our 4108 worked, but as already mentioned being a bit further from the source they allowed odors, grease, etc. to make contact with a much broader surface. By the time the ceiling vents have removed all the moisture and such it's already spread through the cabin somewhat.

My recommendation would be for a traditional range hood, and one designed to work in an RV would be able to operate on 12v with no converter necessary.
Richard
1974 GMC P8M4108a-125 Custom Coach "Land Cruiser" (Sold)
1964 GM PD4106-2412 (Former Bus)
1994 Airstream Excella 25-ft w/ 1999 Suburban 2500
Located in beautiful Wisconsin

oltrunt

The donor 5er that I tore up for parts when I built Honeysuckle Rose came with a ridiculous fume hood that sucked fumes through a filter and then blue them out the top.  I plugged the top and redirected the fumes out the side of the bus above one of the false windows and under the original eyebrow.  It works fine and isn't visible from the outside.  Jack

Sorry about the width of the pics. I don't know what happened but the slide bar at the end of the post allows viewing of the right half of the pics.

.

The plywood was replaced with a sandwich of sheet steel to rep[lace the glass, 2" of foam insulation and an inner layer of stainless steel as a back splash.
.

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Bill Gerrie

I have always used a house type of system. Fantastic vent recommends never to use their fans for cooking exhaust.

Glennman

Thanks for all the responses. It looks like I will need to buy a hood of some sort (preferred to be 22" wide) and modify it to suit my needs. With my method of leaving all the windows in place, I cannot go out the wall (the steel between the top and the windows and the roof is very formidable. To get something out of what's left of the "wall" is undesirable). The RV hoods I've seen all appear to go out the back. I suppose I can change that to go out the roof, which really should not be a problem. I can certainly understand that using a Fantastic Fan 3 feet from the range is not a good plan, and I definitely don't want those mysterious odors that build up over time. I really like ol'trunt's hood! Thanks eveyone.

freds

The hood in mine vents out the top so they are available. Sorry I can't give you any more details as the bus is 1300 miles away.

freds


epretot

If you're producing "fumes" when you cook, you're doing something wrong.
2000 MCI 102 DL3
Loveland, OH

Bill Gerrie

You always produce some form of cast off when cooking. Just look at the filters in a range hood after a period of time. Quite loaded with grease. This is the main reason to exhaust as close to the stove as possible.

Dave5Cs

We just open the window right behind the stove and have a muffin fan there we turn on and it all goes outside. :^
"Perfect Frequency"1979 MCI MC5Cs 6V-71,644MT Allison.
2001 Jeep Cherokee Sport 60th Anniversary edition.
1998 Jeep TJ ,(Gone)
Somewhere in the USA fulltiming.

Iceni John

All the vent hoods I've looked at seem very badly designed and poorly made, so I made my own instead.   There's an openable window behind my cook top and an overhead cabinet above it, so the window is opened down to its first detent leaving a few inches open, and a battery of eight computer fans blow smells straight outside.   When I pull the control handle the outside weather/rain flap opens and the four low-speed fans start, and when I pull the handle further the four high-speed fans then also start.   12V computer fans are only a few dollars each, and they're quiet and use hardly any power.   I also made a shower vent using two more computer fans that blows steamy air out the same window.   They both work well and were cheap to make.

John
1990 Crown 2R-40N-552 (the Super II):  6V92TAC / DDEC II / Jake,  HT740.     Hecho en Chino.
2kW of tiltable solar.
Behind the Orange Curtain, SoCal.

Jim Blackwood

Your range and your shower are both under the same window?

Cool.

Jim
I saw it on the Internet. It MUST be true...

TomC

On both the bus and truck conversion, I did the same thing. A 120vac non vented hood with a Fantastic roof vent above. Did not want another hole on the outside. Just open one window, turn on the hood, turn on the vent to suck things out. We do not deep fry or cook bacon or hamburgers inside. Good Luck, TomC
Tom & Donna Christman. 1985 Kenworth 40ft Super C with garage. '77 AMGeneral 10240B; 8V-71TATAIC V730.