Best Of
Re: Swing Joint on steam main
This might be a better design, just keep everything sloping back to the boiler return.
Or perhaps a different trap will work.
Re: 2 Pipe Steam Radiator / Blower Unit
that is called a unit heater. make sure it has the capacity to do what you are trying to do with it. the motor can probably be replaced if it were to fail. the fan is probably controlled by an aquastat on the piping somewhere
Re: new crown gas fired steam boilers - water needed every week
Boiler 1’s main vent is insufficient as was pointed out by another poster. It’s that skinny chrome one near the ceiling. I don’t think I’ve seen boiler 2’s
It's in the pictures, same thing: just stuck on the end of a reducing tee.
Re: Taping the seams of oil boiler exhaust pipe vent pipe?
I've worked on those boilers with both the Beckett AFG (which you have), and the Carlin 100. The Valiant is a PITA to clean (top and front access), and the burner absolutely needs adjustment. And an analyzer tells you what needs adjustment.
I would recommend an oil delay valve for pre and post purge. The existing primary can be programmed to accept it.
HVACNUT
Re: Why are some 2 pipe rads supplied from the top, and others from the bottom?
The steam will rise to the top. it will fill diagonally across from the inlet end to the opposite end if the tops of the sections are connected, if the sections are only connected at the bottom it will fill one section at a time starting at the inlet side, once a section is full it will spill out in to the next section.
Re: What are these steam traps for?
I looks like they're there to get rid of condensate that gets trapped when the zone valves close. Without them the steam would hammer that water every time the valves opened on a call.
Grallert
Re: thermostats in parallel
The product in your link appears that it would work in the same method as any thermostat, so I don't see why you can't wire it in parallel with your primary thermostat to guarantee that the temperature will never fall below 50.
Re: new crown gas fired steam boilers - water needed every week
the steam piping and return look pretty ok. Skimming is not draining and yes your gauge glass shows signs of oil requiring skimming.
The makeup water piping is a horror show but that won’t affect your boiler’s performance
Re: new crown gas fired steam boilers - water needed every week
Did you start out with the statement that your boiler needs water weekly. I would think that your boiler is "losing water abnormally".
And your contract says "We hereby state that the work we have proposed will correct the problems associated with the improperly piped boiler and that all of the radiators will heat thoroughly and evenly, the boiler not lose water abnormally, the boiler water will stop surging and the boiler will stop short cycling. In the event that the work we complete does not improve the situation then all monies paid for our work shall be refunded in full."
Based on that line in the contract, I think you need to apply for the "refund in full" in writing. See how fast they start looking for that leak.
Start keeping a written log of how much water you are adding and how often.
In order to know how much water you are adding, you can mark the water line with tape on the gauge glass. Then mark the spot where the LWCO stops the burner by removing that much water into a bucket. From the bucket, measure how many quarts or gallons that much water is on the gauge glass. (For example 1.5" on gauge glass = 2.7 gallons or something like that)
Now every time you need to add water you know how many gallons you are adding and you can write it down with the date and keep a record of it.
That info will hold up in court if that boiler is still losing water in 3 years when it gets to court.
But it won't get that far. I had the same thing happen on a church that used 999 gallons of water in the first 6 weeks of operation. I found a buried wet return in a crawlspace that was rotted away. All the return condensate from that section of the building was draining into the crawl space under the sand. The church agreed to pay extra for that pipe repair. And that repair solved the boiler water loss problem.
Re: Boiler oversized, should I turn it off?
If the baseboard are warm or hot when the zone isn't running, then that's what we call a heat rise. There should be a Flo valve on the boiler that prevents the hot water from traveling through the zone unless the circulator comes on.
You can also make the aquastat cold start. High 160°, Low off.
Looks like I'm being redundant.
HVACNUT


