Instead fresh air still flows in through the soffit vents and travels along the underside of the sheathing until it reaches a ridge vent or can be vented with another type of exhaust vent.
Dryer vent through attic to soffit.
The less back pressure is created by the roof vent the more efficiently the system performs.
Doing so would fill your attic with warm moist air that could rot the framing.
Soffit vents are intake vents so any air exhausted at that point will likely be sucked back up into the attic.
Range hoods shall discharge to the outdoors through a single wall duct.
Also the dryer and the bathroom fans should be vented separately and should never be vented out the soffit vent.
The duct serving.
Not a good thing.
Air shall not be exhausted into an attic soffit ridge vent or crawl space.
Where the make and model of the clothes dryer to be installed is known and the manufacturer s installation instructions for the dryer are provided to the building official.
Avoid installing the dryer vent termination cap in a soffit overhang under a roof.
This water vapor will condense on the cold lumber in the attic.
I assume that your laundry is in an interior space and venting directly through an exterior wall is impossible.
And given the expectations for soffit venting and roof venting these days if an attic space is properly vented it would almost for sure preclude the soffit venting of any exhaust.
The vent cover still allows for proper maintenance and cleaning because of the box design and should prove to be more than difficult for rodents to gain access to the dryer venting.
I usually recommend to have a dryer vent exit the home most anywhere but within a soffit.
Use manufacured and ca approved vents see below to retrofit existing attic soffit basement foundation and gable vents where possible.
Alternatively cover all existing vent openings with 1 8 inch or 1 16 inch wire mesh.
The clouds of water vapor can easily find their way into the attic through soffit vents cracks or any other small opening.
You must terminate your dryer vent outside the building according to section m1502 of the irc.
This also means that you can t blow the dryer exhaust into the attic or the crawlspace.
Considering that back pressure higher than 6 wci is generally recognized as inefficient you can see that venting through the roof with non dryer specific vents is immediately problematic.