Heat
& Air
BOILER,
HOT WATER HEATING
Many older homes and some
new ones have boilers supplying heat using radiators or
under floor piping. The boilers usually operate on
fuel oil or gas. There are a few electric boilers still
in operation. It does not matter which system the house
has, they all operate using the same basic principals.
There
are two types of system.
The closed type where the water is heated in the boiler
and circulated through out the system using a
circulation pump, to allow for the waters natural
expansion as it heats the system is fitted with an
expansion tank. If additional water is needed in
the system an automatic filling valve adds the water.
This is the most common system found.
The open or un-pressurized system, found in very old
houses, uses a header tank in the attic to allow
the expanding water to vent from the system and also to
add water to the system as the water level falls in the
system.
The water in the heating
system is separate from the drinking water plumbing in
the house. Very little water is added to the system over
the course of the heating season.
Difference
between hot water and forced air.
A gas furnace and gas boiler, or
oil furnace and oil boiler will need the same annual
maintenance. Additionally the boiler system should have
the expansion tank emptied annually if it is not the
newer pressurized type with a bladder. Monthly, the
radiators or under floor circuits should be bled for air
build up. A forced air system has a blower to move the
air, the boiler uses a pump to move the water through
the pipes.
Boiler
water pressure
Should be checked during the heating season, normal
pressure should be in the 12 to 15 lb operating range
when hot, pressures outside these parameters should be
checked immediately.
Bleeding
air from the system
In houses with hot water heating, air gets trapped in
the top of the radiators making them feel cold and
reducing their ability to heat. This air must be removed
or bled. On the top end of the upright type radiator
there is a bleeder valve that accepts a radiator key,
with a cup under the protruding nozzle open the key one
or two turns. A hiss of air will be followed by a stream
of water. Close the valve. Similarly
behind the access cover on one end of a
baseboard radiator there is a screw that operates the
bleeder valve. Systems that have under floor heating use
a distribution pipe with all the bleeder valves beside
each other along with flow regulating valves for each
circuit, these valves can be adjusted to increase or
decrease the heat in each room or zone.
Automatic bleeders are available.
Circulation
Pump
It is suggested that the circulation pump when installed
should be wired in a manner that allows the user to
switch it on for constant water circulation. Normal
wiring practices have the pump cycling on and off with
the boiler. The constant flow maintains a more uniform
temperature and takes the start up load off the boiler.
Recommend
Adding a water conditioner (chemical additive) to the water in the enclosed
water system to reduce the damage to the pipes and pump
caused by the minerals in the water.
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