cancel
Showing results forย 
Search instead forย 
Did you mean:ย 

Venting cooking steam outside

anoldman
Explorer
Explorer
I recently purchased a 2000 Winnebago Adventurer 35u and it does not exhaust the cooking steam outside like our camper did. This one has a Sharp R-1850 convection/microwave above the stove and all the fan does is blow the fumes right back onto our heads. We have to run a ceiling exhaust fan to keep from steaming up the RV. After doing a little research on this Sharp oven I see the exhaust can be vented outside with the proper duct work. Has anyone modified their RV to do this and what problems might I find if I proceed? I'm pretty handy with tools but am concerned with cutting through the outside wall and what might be behind it. Thanks!
11 REPLIES 11

YC_1
Nomad
Nomad
Outstanding! You probably were amazed how much quieter it is inside now too.

Now for your next project to enhance the cooking area. Notice how poor the light is below the microwave? And inside the cabinets next to it was very difficult to see in. I tapped into one of the light fixtures and ran led lighting under the microwave, under the edge of the cabinets, in the cabinets, and behind our spice rack. What a difference. The leds are cheap on Ebay and you can cut to length with scissors. Oh, and then our closet was very dim so I strip lighted it too and added a motion detector. Went crazy and did the huge storage bay with a motion detector too.

Have fun.
H/R Endeavor 2008
Ford F150 toad >Full Timers
Certified Senior Electronic Technician, Telecommunications Engineer, Telecommunications repair Service Center Owner, Original owner HR 2008

anoldman
Explorer
Explorer
Done! I ordered an outside flapper vent and installed it today. I took down that huge and heavy microwave and turned around the fan to exhaust outside. The mounting bracket was still attached to the wall and it made the perfect template for marking the hole I need to cut through the wall. I made a shallow cut about 1/8" deep on the inside wall and sure enough there were two horizontal aluminum braces about 2" apart right across the area and 3 wires running vertical through it too. I decided not to cut the braces and just use the available 2" gap for the exhaust. I drilled holes through to the outside and made a shallow cut for the outside vent. The wires had enough slack so I routed them around the edge of my new vent opening. I then trimmed the new vent to fit between the braces and calked and screwed it all in place. You'd never know it wasn't "factory".

The hardest part was handling that microwave/convection oven. It was a pain taking it down and putting it back up again, but it was definitely worth the trouble. Now that cooking steam and grease will be outside instead of collecting on my walls and windows inside. I've still got to do the flapper magnet (Thanks YC 1) but that's it.

Thanks again to all who offered suggestions and Happy Camping!

anoldman
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks for the suggestion. I tried my stud finder on those walls and it looks like there's a beam right in the middle of my potential cutout. I'm going to make a shallow cut inside to be sure what's behind there and route around anything in the way with the vent. I'll kill all power so there's no fireworks if I cut a wire. Going to make this happen one way or another. That cooking grease has got to go!

Clay_L
Explorer
Explorer
The wall beams/studs are extruded aluminum (except in the cabin area - that is steel).
There is wiring in some places that runs in channels cut in the styrofoam in the walls.

I asked Winnebago about where some of the aluminum plates are that they put in the walls where cabinets and the like are screwed to and they emailed me drawings of the side walls showing where stuff was. You might want to give them a call.
Clay (WA5NMR), Lee (Wife), Katie & Kelli (cats) Salli (dog).

Fixed domicile after 1 year of snowbirding and eleven years Full Timing in a 2004 Winnebago Sightseer 35N, Workhorse chassis, Honda Accord toad

anoldman
Explorer
Explorer
I hadn't thought about leaving a potential wall stud in place and routing the exhaust on either side of it. Sounds like a great suggestion. I wouldn't think it would hinder much air flow, and besides anything is an improvement over gunking up the motorhome with cooking grease. Time to take the plunge and buy a vent. Thanks to all who offered help and Happy Camping!

njtony
Explorer
Explorer
our 2013 coachman marida does not have an exhaust vent for oven, VERY dumb idea.

YC_1
Nomad
Nomad
Stud finders can be helpful. Go out early on a dewy morning and you may be able to see if there are beams in the way. You would not have to cut the beam out in any case. Paint it or use foam to protect it if you happen to find one in the way. I layered my two vent holes with metal duct tape. The outside plastic vent with a flap and latch was fine except no way to reach the latch. A strong magnet and then a washer glued to the inside edge works great. When the fan comes on it flaps open just fine.
H/R Endeavor 2008
Ford F150 toad >Full Timers
Certified Senior Electronic Technician, Telecommunications Engineer, Telecommunications repair Service Center Owner, Original owner HR 2008

anoldman
Explorer
Explorer
Yeah, I thought it was pretty dumb to just circulate the steam that way. There is no outside cooking exhaust vent on this RV. I thought maybe there was some hidden vent that I just hadn't found but they simply didn't build these RVs with them.

The Sharp microwave/convection oven is an all-in-one unit with a built in fan on the bottom to capture cooking steam from the range burners and, according to the installation manual I downloaded, it can be turned to either circulate or exhaust cooking steam. I'm thinking of adding the outside flapper/vent and routing the exhaust out through it. Just a little spooked about what structure or wiring might be right in the middle of a cutout. That could make for a very bad day indeed. Anyone know if a stud finder works on an RV? I think the frame on mine is steel but not sure.

YC_1
Nomad
Nomad
Download the manual and I suspect you can change it to vent to the outside. That part was easy. Had to cut through the outside and add a vent with flapper. Really dumb to have these things vent inside.
H/R Endeavor 2008
Ford F150 toad >Full Timers
Certified Senior Electronic Technician, Telecommunications Engineer, Telecommunications repair Service Center Owner, Original owner HR 2008

Tango__AE7UI
Explorer
Explorer
Not all convection/microwave ovens vent directly outside.
Ours does not but the range hood (separate from the microwave) does.
2007 Tango 2660RKS Fifth Wheel, 2006 Chevy D/A 3500 with service body,

Turbo_Diesel_Du
Explorer
Explorer
Don't you already have an exhaust vent? Look on the outside and unlock the flapper door.
charles weidman