Best Of
Re: Couple of recent steamers
@mattmia2 one is a rebranded US boiler sold through F.W. Webb, the other is a Utica Heat.
Thanks.
@snowmelt for a power steeling thermostat.
EzzyT
Re: Heat loss calc..
Billing update.
So my DHW bill with the new combi for the month of Aug was 70% lower than the same month last year when i was on my old tank system.
Re: One-inch magnetic filter on 1-1/4 boiler return?
Lots of great stuff to reply to here, and I will later. But first, as per @EdTheHeaterMan’s suggestion, for the very first time to the general public, a photo of the thick black sludge that was only in my mind, not the boiler, after a year of operation. This is with the small leak on the supply.
(Given this nice gray water, would it still be worth it to treat the system with cleaner then inhibitor like Sentinel’s X400 and X100 or another brand? The system will be open soon to repair that leak, however if that repair is all I do I’d just have to drain enough to get below the supply tapping — zones closed — which is a lot different than draining the whole system and refilling with all that fresh oxygen. Another possibility is just to use the inhibitor, in theory Sentinel’s can be injected with little or no draining.)
Re: Why Is It So Hard To Hire A Contractor?
It is quite overwhelming, the number of people who tell me in a given week that nobody will call them back. I will admit that I forget sometimes, but 99% of the time I will drop what I'm doing to take a call. I will listen to what they have to say and if I don't have the time or desire to perform said task, I simply tell them the truth. The vast majority of those saying they couldn't get a call back are polite with reasonable requests, at least from my POV (and I'm probably more judgemental that I should be), so it's doubtful that they were being ignored due to something they said in the voicemail. Sure I can move that spigot, but I have to charge it as a service call and it's going to be expensive despite being a "simple" job. If I have to spend 2 hours driving to and from your location and another hour swapping a circulator and purging your system, that's not a "simple job" anymore. Most people understand that, but I've learned to be upfront with everybody that calls for service and just say it's $$ for my first hour and $ per hour after that including windshield time round trip, plus parts. Some will have a conniption and call somebody else, but most just want it fixed. Once in awhile it even turns into a $$$$ job with a whole new system, though I'm not the "oh my gosh this is going to start a fire, you need a whole new system ASAP or we're going to have to red tag it" kind of person. We can throw parts at this and limp it along if you want, but I'll leave it entirely up to you. Very seldom do they want to limp it, and I think many of them trust my opinion more because I made the effort to take their call and get over there tomorrow to assess rather than have Harriett write up a proposal when she gets to it next month.
Why Is It So Hard To Hire A Contractor?
A Wall Street Journal writer got in touch with me last summer and asked if she could interview me. She was working on an article about why it was so hard to hire a contractor. It was to be in the Small Business section of the Journal. She was mainly concerned with those contractors who don’t return calls, or those who show up, give an estimate, and then just disappear.
Re: Anyone in central Jersey have a guy that knows a guy-condenser recycling needs r22 removed
Drive by a Wawa at lunchtime, ask a person in a HVAC van. They usually scrap, and they can recover the refrigerant. They can be checked for acid and non condensables to determine its fate.
Re: Any steam heat contractors near Bloomington IN?
@MattinIndy , you should consider getting a Find a Contractor ad on this site. We get quite a few inquiries from your area, which could go to you.
Re: Sub floor radiant heat for primary heat source
Those Rehau plates look super nice. But looking online, it seems like the cost is $500 for 80 linear feet, which would cover about 100 square feet of floor with 16" joists. Or $5 square foot just for the plates. That sounds pretty steep.



