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Radiant with Bradford-White Combi-core water heater
Steve Garson_2
Member Posts: 712
This should make for spirited discussion:
Five years ago, my contractor built an addition with radiant heat. The water is heated by a Bradford-White Combi-Core water heater, that has a water loop for the radiant in the water heater. I know this wastes a lot of heat through the vent, but that's what I have. The rest of the house is steam.
Realizing that these water heaters last only ten years, I am thinking toward the future. Bradford-White has another similar heater with power venting that eliminates the atmospheric heat loss.
My heat loss for the radiant heated are is only around 18,000 BTU. The water heater uses 65,000BTU with an AFUE of 82%, which I can't imagine bears any relation to that AFUE with a boiler; or perhaps it does. I am thinking that the lower efficiency of the water heater is offset by the much lower cost of the heater.
When it comes time to replace. What would you pros recommend if it were your house?
Five years ago, my contractor built an addition with radiant heat. The water is heated by a Bradford-White Combi-Core water heater, that has a water loop for the radiant in the water heater. I know this wastes a lot of heat through the vent, but that's what I have. The rest of the house is steam.
Realizing that these water heaters last only ten years, I am thinking toward the future. Bradford-White has another similar heater with power venting that eliminates the atmospheric heat loss.
My heat loss for the radiant heated are is only around 18,000 BTU. The water heater uses 65,000BTU with an AFUE of 82%, which I can't imagine bears any relation to that AFUE with a boiler; or perhaps it does. I am thinking that the lower efficiency of the water heater is offset by the much lower cost of the heater.
When it comes time to replace. What would you pros recommend if it were your house?
Steve from Denver, CO
0
Comments
-
Surprised
that your CombiCor has lasted so long; all the ones we installed gave up the ghost just after 1 year.
I'm a fan of water heaters for small radiant loads; conventional water heater for domestic with an external heat exchanger for radiant or to make it easy, a Taco mixing block:
http://www.blueridgecompany.com/radiant/hydronic/4840 -
-
Yes, the water heater serves for DHW. Are you suggesting that the tankless feed the DHW and have a take-off feeding an indirect, with the outlet of the indirect going back to the tankless?Steve from Denver, CO0 -
Good thing
I am not paranoid...
You ought to know my full name (forgetting middle names) is indeed Bradford White...
So keep going... my ears were burning but for naught0 -
For that size load
Which I assume is at design day? Think a small electric WH would be my choice. A 5000 watt element in a small 6 gallon tank gives you 17,000 BTU/hr.
Inexpensive, 100% efficient, etc. I highly doubt you are running 82% efficiency with any gas fired WH
hot rod
To Learn More About This Professional, Click Here to Visit Their Ad in "Find A Professional"0 -
Sort of
I'd turn the indirect into a Combi-cor. Use the indirect's internal coil as the heat exchanger for the radiant loop.
The tankless and indirect would be set up like a booster tank. Get a bronze or stainless pump to circ the DHW through the tankess and back into the indirect. You'll need a tank with a bottom drain that you could use as the 3rd tapping. The indrect's aquastats will run the bronze pump and the flow will fire the tankless. Now you have a good supply of DHW and don't have to wait for the tankless to kick in.1 -
So is something like a Bosch 250SX-NG (Natural Gas) Tankless Water Heater what would make sense?Steve from Denver, CO0
This discussion has been closed.
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