You need an active intake, to make sure you get a good enough supply of oxygen and extraction of CO2.atomicus wrote: argument's sake though, if I were able to do this, this would then be the passive intake I presume?
You could fit a inline fan between the silencer and the garage door. The extra long flexible duct would just be attached to the fan and the garage door grille.
Are you fitting the silencers directly onto the wall, or decoupling them at all?atomicus wrote: sleeve is built into the box... so if I do this, and the box is up against the wall, how do I get to the gap around the sleeve to fill it with caulk?
If fitting directly on the wall:
You just put lots of caulk all over the silencer box where it meets the wall, press it up right against the wall, fix it in place and caulk around the outside perimeter.
The only bits you can't caulk, will be bits covered by the box, in which case the box will have had caulk on that face anyway and have been compressed against the wall, sealing the gaps.
Here's how I would do it:atomicus wrote:Regardless which way I do it, I'm having trouble imagining how I will seal ALL gaps with caulk, plus get access to that bridging point on the sleeves between the inner and out leaf box and deal with that properly.
Build all your framing first, without any facing material (plasterboard etc). Then place a small piece of plasterboard/osb on the areas for each silencer. Make it small enough for your to be able to comfortably reach through to the sleeve in the cavity. Cut a hole for each silencer sleeve. Caulk up your silencer and fit it in place. Fit the matching silencer on the other side of the wall on its own piece of plasterboard. Now access the side of the cavity (remember your didn't plasterboard the whole wall yet) and join the sleeves. Repeat for the other pair of silencers.
When you're all hooked up, it would be best to test your ventilation and ducts at this point, to look for leaks.
Then you can go ahead and finish plasterboarding the rest of the wall. And move on to your second layer.
Dan