Module 7 of 10 200m 200 min 10 exam Qs 10 exam questions covered
Venting Systems & Categories
Appliance venting categories I through IV, vent materials, clearances, sidewall termination, and vent connector requirements.
- Classify appliances into vent categories I through IV
- Select correct vent materials for each category
- Apply vent clearance and termination requirements
Lesson 1
Appliance Vent Categories I - IV
The Four Vent Categories
CSA B149.1 classifies gas appliance venting into four categories based on flue gas pressure and condensation potential:
| Category | Pressure | Condensing | Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| I | Negative (natural draft) | Non-condensing | Conventional furnace, water heater |
| II | Negative | Condensing | Mid-efficiency furnace |
| III | Positive | Non-condensing | Some commercial equipment |
| IV | Positive | Condensing | High-efficiency condensing furnace |
Cat I
Most Common Residential (Conventional)
Cat IV
Most Common Residential (High Efficiency)
Understanding the Classification
- Negative vs. Positive pressure - Category I and II use natural draft (negative pressure in the vent). Categories III and IV use a combustion blower that creates positive pressure in the vent pipe.
- Condensing vs. Non-condensing - Condensing appliances extract so much heat that flue gases cool below the dew point, producing acidic condensate. This affects vent material selection.
Exam Memory Aid
Remember the categories by pressure then condensation: I = Negative/No, II = Negative/Yes, III = Positive/No, IV = Positive/Yes. Category I and IV are the most common residential categories.
Key Takeaway
Four vent categories based on pressure and condensation. Category I (negative/non-condensing) and Category IV (positive/condensing) are the most common residential installations. Category determines vent material and installation requirements.