Cold Air Return in Basement: List of Materials Needed For The Project
Cold Air Return in Basement: List of Materials Needed For The Project
Here on this page you can learn one of the cases of the cold air return working for the
finished basement:
Hammer
Replaceable-blade snips
Magic marker
Scratch awl
When people are finishing their basements off, they are usually creating a mechanical
room. This room is serving not only the purpose of separating noisy heating equipment
such as furnace, water heater and so on, but also serves as a storage room. From the
ductwork installation point of view, it makes easier to install a cold air return.
In order to better organize an explanation of the execution of this project I would like to
divide it in several steps:
P. 1
In order to install the frame you should do following:
1
Put a mark on the studs 8 off the floor by using a tape measure, magic marker or
pencil
Set frames right lateral side on the studs pencil mark and drive the first sheeting
nail to the top. Before you do that, make sure that the frames left lateral side
reaches the stud to your left
Straighten up 6 piece of the frame and drive a second nail
Do the same on the left hand side
In some places you can buy 14 x 6 plastic frames, they are even easer to install.
P. 3
P. 4
P. 5
Put a pipe on the floor so the crimped part of it has appeared on the right hand
side
Take a tape measure in the left hand and replaceable-blades snips in the right hand
and hook up the tape measures blade to the pipes edge to the right
Stretch a tape measure out from the right to the left on a distance just a little bit
longer than you need for a cut (P. 4)
P. 6
P. 7
Put a replaceable-blades snips on the pipe under the necessary mark on the tape
measure and cut. Let tape measure to wind and put it back in the pouch
Keep cutting at a right angle to the seam of the pipe. At the same time, lift the
pipe up with your left hand to allow yourself to cut it to the halfway of the pipe
(P. 5)
Then reach to the lower seam with your left hand and grab it there. Put pipe on
your left thigh and keep cutting until you cut through another seam (P. 6)
If your grip is not strong enough, or the metal gauge is heavy, or you are cutting 3 or 4
pipes, you can start the cut through the seam with a pair of aviation snips or compound
leverage bulldog nose snips. Small sizes of pipe such as 3 4 you can keep cutting
with the aviation snips (P. 9).
Sometimes there is a necessity to cut a pipe from another hand side, it happens, when you
need a short piece of pipe or you need very precise cut and you are starting to cut the pipe
through both seams. In this case, match a mark on the tape measure with the edge of the
pipe, put replaceable-blades snips at the hook of the tape measure, and start your cut (P.
6).
How to cut a pipe straight:
In the other manuals, you can find very weird instructions for making a straight cut! They
are recommending mark the pipe to length on each side of the seam and once half way
around.
However, in the real live you should do following:
Once you started to cut follow the thin scratches, which you may see on the surface of the
pipe. Usually there are hundreds of them. They have occurred when pipes were flatted in
the machine.
In addition, when you cut with the straight-cut snips those snips has big flat surface,
which will help you to make a cut straight.
However, if you think that you need a really straight cut you can start cutting from the
both parts of the seam (see P.8) and after you started cutting aim snips to the second cut
through the seam.
If you are cutting short piece of pipe just next to the crimp you have to do it with the red
aviation snips (see P. 9).
P. 8
P. 9
P. 10
Go around the wall and make some cuts on the pipe sticking out inside of the
panned stud space
Bend pieces of pipe (tabs) out as it shown in the P. 1