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Are You Breathing Dead Possum? — Crawl Spaces, HVAC, & IAQ

Dead Possum Near A Disconnected Return Duct

If you were a really strange person, or even a normal person who maybe just has some really odd ideas, and you wanted to breathe the gaseous emissions from a dead, rotten decaying possum, while in your home, how would you do it? I know what I’d do. I’d go get a dead, rotten decaying possum and put it right in my living room. That’d do the trick. And if I needed to turn it up a notch, I’d throw some more dead, rotten decaying possums on the pile.

The next best thing

The next best thing would be to keep the dead possum outside your home, say in the crawl space, and pipe the emissions into the house. That’s exactly what these homeowners were doing, unintentionally. Our friends at E3 Innovate in Nashville, Tennessee sent us this photo of what they found in the crawl space under the home of one of their customers.

See the possum? See the problem? The dead possum by itself is bad enough, but there’s one thing in this photo that makes it even worse. The photo below shows you what it is.

Dead possum near a disconnected return duct, annotated photoThe possum that the guys at E3 Innovate found in this crawl space just happened to die right next to where that disconnected return duct was lying on the ground. What that means is that all those nasty emissions from the decaying possum corpse have an easy path into the house.

What about that return duct?

Now, if you know anything about forced air heating and cooling systems, you may be wondering what the other end of that return duct is connected to. It could be connected to a return grille, in which case the noxious emanations would travel up into the house relatively slowly. Anytime someone in the home walked by that grille, they’d get a powerful whiff.

The other possibility is that the other end of the disconnected return duct is connected to the air handler. If that were the case, that open duct lying there by the possum carcass would be pulling air strongly from the surrounding area whenever the heating or cooling system was running. That fetid crawl space air would then get distributed to every room in the house.

In fact, in this home, the latter was the case. The disconnected return was connected to the air handler. The owners knew there was a bad smell, but had no idea where it was coming from or why it was so bad.

The solution

The immediate fix here, of course, is to get rid of the dead possum and then reconnect that return duct. To solve the general problems of having a vented crawl space, encapsulating it is the ticket. E3 Innovate does a beautiful job encapsulating crawl spaces, which they did in this home. The photo below is from a different home, but you can see how nice it looks when it’s all shiny and clean.

crawl space encapsulated conditioned clean iaq moisture e3 innovate 440

First of all, when you go to all this trouble to encapsulate a crawl space, it’s a lot less likely that you’re going to get possums in there. I’m not saying it’ll never happen, but it’s improbable. If one does get in there, it’s pretty easy to find and remove.

This is why that old expression about possums is so popular. You know the one I’m talking about, right? The one about how something “stands out like a dead possum in an encapsulated crawl space.” Surely you’ve heard it before.

 

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This Post Has 5 Comments

  1. J. Possum P.
    J. Possum P.: Yeah, animals do crawl into ductwork and air handlers and die there. If you follow the HVAC hacks page on Facebook, you’ll see photos of that kind of stuff. Snakes, frogs, possums… You name it. Even squirrels! Sometimes they get crushed by the fan. Sometimes electrocuted. Critters and HVAC don’t go together well!  

  2. A disconnected duct like you
    A disconnected duct like you show, I would hesitate to call that even Building Science. It is just terrible lack of integrity on someone’s part. When I look back on the number of times I paid for something, I was told the job was completed, and later learned it was not done, I tend to think the answers to many problems lie in simple craftsmanship. 
     
    Like Pirsig’s “Quality” in “Zen and the Art of Motorcycle Maintenance”, you already have an intuitive understanding of what it is.

  3. First, nice job by E3
    First, nice job by E3 Innovate. I’m seeing more and more of these well done jobs. Kudos to all who get this right. 
     
    As to your new old possum saying, it’s true that one of the benefits of encapsulating a crawl space is that bad stuff does show up. Never underestimate the benefit of being able to see a problem. 
     
    Oh, and far be it from me to gossip, but has Mr. Poole undergone a species change? It’s so hard to keep track these days…

  4. I’ve always been fearful of
    I’ve always been fearful of “fetid” crawl space air. Thank goodness someone’s ocular acuity discovered this problem.

  5. I’m glad the auditors at E3
    I’m glad the auditors at E3 innovate were able to quickly narrow down the possumbilties as to what might be causing that smell. Otherwise, they would have left the homeowner hanging.

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