I've nearly finished installing our new kitchen. I've fitted a new chimney extractor above the hob that - despite being the £99 cheapo from B&Q - is quiet and powerful... until I connect it to the ducting through the wall.
Our house is ten years old. The wall duct is offset from the centreline of the hob (builder cock-up, I think) so to connect this new chimney to the existing hole I've had to use two 100mm rectangle right-angles behind the plasterboard together with the circle-to-rectangle adapter above the hood. Joining the hood to the new duct is a 1 foot length of 100mm PVC ducting hose.
On the lowest speed setting the hood can easily hold a piece of A4 paper against the filters, but if the duct is connected then it can't. With the duct connected the hood is noisy, rattly and ineffective. Can a short length of ducting with two right-angles have such a massive effect on the efficiency of the hood? What can I do to overcome this problem?
Our house is ten years old. The wall duct is offset from the centreline of the hob (builder cock-up, I think) so to connect this new chimney to the existing hole I've had to use two 100mm rectangle right-angles behind the plasterboard together with the circle-to-rectangle adapter above the hood. Joining the hood to the new duct is a 1 foot length of 100mm PVC ducting hose.
On the lowest speed setting the hood can easily hold a piece of A4 paper against the filters, but if the duct is connected then it can't. With the duct connected the hood is noisy, rattly and ineffective. Can a short length of ducting with two right-angles have such a massive effect on the efficiency of the hood? What can I do to overcome this problem?