Confused - Venilation vs Draft

jdoane

Songster
6 Years
Aug 7, 2013
609
32
128
Western Massachusetts
I apparently need a good lesson in thermodynamics! I'm having a hard time getting my head around how one can have good ventilation without drafts. Can someone explain that to me?
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If a breeze is hitting the chicken, that is a draft. If moisture and ammonia is leaving the coop, that is ventilation. Ammonia comes from their poop. Moisture comes from their pop and their breath.

Ammonia is lighter than air so it rises. Warm air rises and can hold more moisture than cold air. A breeze blowing between two openings over the chickens’ heads while they are sleeping on the roots is not hitting the chickens. It is taking that lighter than air ammonia and the warmer air out of the coop.

By the way, I thought Thermo was a fairly easy A in college. I know, I’m weird.
 
We have a good amount of ventilation but a lot of it is not over their heads. Will that matter? Is having air coming in at the floor level bad?

Never took Thermodynamics and I think I'm now wishing I did! LOL
 
jdoane I'm so glad you asked this question...I've been wondering the same thing!
 
I am wondering the same thing. How far should a roost be below the ventilation area so that it doesn't hit the birds as a draft? We plan to have heavier birds.

Would love to hear what others have set up...measurements?

Fass
 
I use turbine roof vents (exhaust) and a gable vent (intake). All ventilation takes place in the rafters. Hot/moist air out, cool/dry air in.

This is a 25x25x10 coop.

A draft would be air coming in and blowing through. IE Opening a window on opposite sides of a room in your house.

EDIT:

It's worth noting that the birds think they need to sleep in the rafters, but with the way roof/gable vents work, there's no "draft" blowing through.
 
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MnMPoultry - my husband asked if we could put a turbine vent in. Our coop will only be 7x5 with a slopped roof (6 birds). I have seen turbine vents before, but it seems like they are run by the wind? So, if there is no wind, will there be no venting or will the hot air still escape as needed out the turbine hole?

If I were to put in venting in a couple walls of the coop near the ceiling and also install the turbine vent would that help with days of no wind? Would love your expertise on if this would work for our coop size or if a turbine is overkill for a 7x5 coop. Thanks!

Fass
 
Dont make this too complicated, as long as you have some way for air to escape near the roof and enter down lower you will be fine. If your coop is underventilated you will know.
 
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