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heat from oil boiler with water baseboard loop
alano9999
Member Posts: 17
in Oil Heating
Hi - I have an oil fired boiler and one pipe steam heat via various radiators. However attached to the same boiler is a hot water loop that supports baseboard heat in one room. There is also a Taco circulating pump for the water loop.
The boiler has various controls attached. What determines not sending steam trough a baseboard water loop?
Thanks
The boiler has various controls attached. What determines not sending steam trough a baseboard water loop?
Thanks
0
Comments
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Steam won't go through the baseboard loop provided the intake and return from the loop are below -- preferably some distance below -- the low water cutoff level of the boiler. It simply can't get there.
Is there a concern?Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England0 -
Hi Jamie
The boiler seems to have a number of controls on it, I was trying to understand if these controls concern the hot water loop. I do have a loud rattling sound when the loop is feeding water. Could this be a check valve?0 -
Hi Jaime
It does seem that the hot water loop is below the LWCO. However I notice at times that the circulating pump is running when the weather does not call for steam yet. What determines when this pump operates?
Thanks0 -
Just so we know, how do you heat your domestic hot water for faucets, shower etc?0
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The circulating pump for your hot water loop should run when the thermostat for that loop calls for heat -- and not, of course, when it doesn't. There should be an "aquastat" -- possibly on the pipe from the boiler to the circulator, but also quite possibly in a tapping on the boiler -- which keeps the boiler water hot enough for the hot water loop to be effective. If, as @JUGHNE 's question implied, you also heat your domestic hot water with that boiler, it's likely that the same aquastat is being used for both functions.Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England0 -
It occurs to me to add -- if that buffer tank is separated by a heat exchanger in it from the boilers, then the rest of the system needs a separate expansion tank, which could go on the outlet from the buffer tank.Br. Jamie, osb
Building superintendent/caretaker, 7200 sq. ft. historic house museum with dependencies in New England0 -
Hi Jamie & Jughne
To clarify, I have a separate standard hot water heater for faucets and showers..
On the boiler, I have a Honeywell L4006A. It is set at 180. I think this is an Aquastat. Is this used for the hot water loop to ensure that the water is at least 180 degrees?
The circulating pump is wired into a Honeywell R520 26R.
Is this some sort of electrical relay?
Thanks
0
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