Submitted by fancypanting t3_10fs5ma in DIY
I am retrofitting a new bathroom (< 50 sqft). I have 2 problems.
The major problem is from the cut out hole I see the ceiling is only 3 inches deep, while the smallest exhaust fans I can find are 3.6 to 4 inches high. There is a duct or metal sheathing above the hole I cut. The sheathing comes ~1in down on the joist, on both sides of the joist.
I found this thread https://www.doityourself.com/forum/lighting-light-fixtures-ceiling-exhaust-fans/496103-ceiling-fan-box-higher-than-ceiling.html from 2013, which suggests to unscrew the motor from the box and attach to joist directly. This is the manual https://www.manualslib.com/manual/2278228/Hampton-Bay-Bpt12-13e.html?page=10#manual, it does not appear there is any place for screws on the motor itself.
The minor problem is that the 4 inch high vent uses 3 inch exhaust pipe, but I have 4 inch pipe installed. I would presume a 3-4 increaser/reducer would solve the problem. I have also bought a 4 inch pipe exhaust fan, but that one is 5.25 inches high which would protrude further down.
Please suggest what I could do. There is a drop ceiling just 2 ft beside the hole so I wasn't expect there to be any duct. What if I just leave it hang below the ceiling? Anything I need to do for the gap? It's a 8 feet ceiling with exhaust vent retrofitted to be under the ceiling along the corner.
EDIT for in line duct fan, how to connect the grille and elbow if the ceiling space is 3 inches? No space to turn vertically over the ceiling space.
2 WEEK UPDATE: went ahead with an inline duct and grille cover. Works great! Quiet and affordable
JerseyWiseguy t1_j4yokpd wrote
If space is tight, you can always use an inline duct fan anywhere on the duct. Then, you can just attach the duct to the ceiling and put a generic grille over it.