Pressurising Van to stop Dust Ingress .

Wildtrak

New Member
Jan 18, 2017
5
3
3
50
Mackay
Hello team

Has anyone set up a system to pressurise the Van to stop dust ingress .
I will have a 2017 OB Swan in 3 weeks and my neighbour a Expanda .
I am asking really for them as their young daughter has asthma and we were looking for options to stop some of her attacks ..

Cheers
 

Mosue

New Member
Oct 14, 2016
25
23
3
57
Perth WA
I was in a van shop the other day and saw a pressuring vent.
It's a vent mounted on the roof-forward facing- it would have had an opening approx 30mm? so as you drive air is forced into it/the van keeping the van at positive pressure therefore no dust can get in.
I saw it cost about $60....for me I'm not to keen to cut a big hole (approx 100 x 100?) on my roof as 'er indoors would never let me hear the end of it if I stuffed up the install ha!
It does look a better option than dust covers over vents & trying to seal every slight gap
 

Drover

Well-Known Member
Nov 7, 2013
12,944
19,707
113
QLD
First you have to go around and seal all the holes left from the build, cables run thru walls from tail light area and behind the fridge usually and they let in heaps of dust, underneath at the back where the end pod goes onto the cross member lets dust in on some models, all these little spots need to be looked at and sorted with silastic and canned foam, I did find once I sealed these the ingress of dust was practically nil and I only had to drop a flap I had made over the door vent when on dusty roads.... If dust comes in from fridge then it's not fitted correctly same as AC.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bigcol

solterb

Member
Mar 10, 2012
72
27
18
Melbourne
First you have to go around and seal all the holes left from the build, cables run thru walls from tail light area and behind the fridge usually and they let in heaps of dust, underneath at the back where the end pod goes onto the cross member lets dust in on some models, all these little spots need to be looked at and sorted with silastic and canned foam, I did find once I sealed these the ingress of dust was practically nil and I only had to drop a flap I had made over the door vent when on dusty roads.... If dust comes in from fridge then it's not fitted correctly same as AC.
Actually have yet to do some of that stuff myself - its on the list though
 
  • Like
Reactions: bigcol and Drover

Dean Anderson

Well-Known Member
Feb 7, 2014
372
705
93
Isaac Region
upload_2017-3-7_21-20-42.png
upload_2017-3-7_21-17-57.png
Simple really.....more clean air coming in than dirty air...Problem...stop the gaps sucking in through venturi effect....almost impossible...get heaps of clean air to blow in to compensate, and blow out of those holes. A snorkel will help if on the roof, but you need powered pressurisation and a filtration system to make the system work effectively, otherwise you're probably going to be disappointed..
upload_2017-3-7_21-17-57.png


Its actually interesting looking at these photos and comparing to the marketing of car snorkel manufacturers....The cleanest air is probably where manufacturers place the standard car intake if you don't tailgate......
 
Last edited:
  • Like
Reactions: Drover

Drover

Well-Known Member
Nov 7, 2013
12,944
19,707
113
QLD
It's the wet stuff finding the intake thats more the worry.................................I have found keeping dirt roads to a minimum works.
 
  • Like
Reactions: dagree and bigcol

bigcol

Well-Known Member
Nov 22, 2012
6,814
10,164
113
Swan Valley Perth
that, and driving to the conditions

I rarely sit on anything over 75-80k/p/h on gravel roads
and even less when towing the Van

shaking the shyte out of everything and damaging anything is not on my list of things to do while away


(I'm sounding like someone now - GOF...................)
 

Drover

Well-Known Member
Nov 7, 2013
12,944
19,707
113
QLD
Must be something in the van design, Big Mal bounced over a few dusty old roads just lately, no dust inside which surprised me, no vents covered just the drain closed and it's got about 3 vents on the walls and the usual door vents, so makes me think the drains might be a good bit of the cause of low pressure in some vans.
 
  • Like
Reactions: bigcol and dagree