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- #11
Sunshine Flock
Crowing
It's hard to believe I once had a math scholarship in college. Simple math escapes me anymore, but I think I've done this correctly.
As of yesterday, I now have 2.20' square of ventilation in the chicken coop, a small jump up from 1.67' square for my 33' square structure and six chickens.
This isn't a significant increase when placed up against the one square foot per chicken minimum requirement. But just like @Egghead_Jr and @TwoCrows said, if you create convection venting in the eaves, which requires a sloped roof front to back, you require significantly less venting.
Egghead Person, you said you have fifteen chickens and less than two square feet of permanent ventilation. According to the square foot per chicken rule, you should have fifteen square feet of ventilation at a minimum. We see this mentioned in the forums all the time.
Despite all of my research on this, I don't recall ever having read about convection venting with sloped roofs. When I removed a board I mistakenly assumed was structural and opened up the eaves on the west side of the coop (the down slope of the roof), which is exactly opposite the east side (the high point of the slope), the result was significant.
And when I walked into the coop this morning, the smell from the leaves, pine needles and droppings was gone. Yesterday the chicken coop smelled like a petting zoo, and today absolutely nothing. Not even a teeny hint that poop monsters reside in that structure, and the movement of air was refreshing.
Now, I do recall reading that proper ventilation can completely eradicate unpleasant smells inside a chicken coop. But I didn't realize how easily you can accomplish this with simple convention venting.
When I removed that board, I doubled the venting I already had on the east side, and added 75" square. The angle of the roof beams and where they rest on the supports created an additional inch in venting height.
But all totaled, I only have 2.20' square of ventilation, much less than the recommended 6' square for six chickens — and amazingly I don't need anymore!
If someone doesn't have a sloped roof, they'll likely need to stick to the square foot minimum, right? Is it the slope that creates the air movement? Can you replicate this by placing the vents opposite each other, with one side lower than the other?
Can a roof's overhang adversely affect air convection if it's too large?
When I build a retirement coop for the flock as they age, I'm definitely going to build it with a sloped roof, and I'll face the slope north to south for even better air flow. That's the predominant movement of air where I live.
Thank you for the feedback. This was revelatory.
As of yesterday, I now have 2.20' square of ventilation in the chicken coop, a small jump up from 1.67' square for my 33' square structure and six chickens.
This isn't a significant increase when placed up against the one square foot per chicken minimum requirement. But just like @Egghead_Jr and @TwoCrows said, if you create convection venting in the eaves, which requires a sloped roof front to back, you require significantly less venting.
Egghead Person, you said you have fifteen chickens and less than two square feet of permanent ventilation. According to the square foot per chicken rule, you should have fifteen square feet of ventilation at a minimum. We see this mentioned in the forums all the time.
Despite all of my research on this, I don't recall ever having read about convection venting with sloped roofs. When I removed a board I mistakenly assumed was structural and opened up the eaves on the west side of the coop (the down slope of the roof), which is exactly opposite the east side (the high point of the slope), the result was significant.
And when I walked into the coop this morning, the smell from the leaves, pine needles and droppings was gone. Yesterday the chicken coop smelled like a petting zoo, and today absolutely nothing. Not even a teeny hint that poop monsters reside in that structure, and the movement of air was refreshing.
Now, I do recall reading that proper ventilation can completely eradicate unpleasant smells inside a chicken coop. But I didn't realize how easily you can accomplish this with simple convention venting.
When I removed that board, I doubled the venting I already had on the east side, and added 75" square. The angle of the roof beams and where they rest on the supports created an additional inch in venting height.
But all totaled, I only have 2.20' square of ventilation, much less than the recommended 6' square for six chickens — and amazingly I don't need anymore!
If someone doesn't have a sloped roof, they'll likely need to stick to the square foot minimum, right? Is it the slope that creates the air movement? Can you replicate this by placing the vents opposite each other, with one side lower than the other?
Can a roof's overhang adversely affect air convection if it's too large?
When I build a retirement coop for the flock as they age, I'm definitely going to build it with a sloped roof, and I'll face the slope north to south for even better air flow. That's the predominant movement of air where I live.
Thank you for the feedback. This was revelatory.
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