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Hot-water tankless/zone control question

Looked at a job the other day that was, shall we say, a kludge.

I've spent the afternoon going through wiring diagrams and haven't found a way to do this yet. We don't run into many of these.

House is mid-century slab-on-ground, no basement. Tiny boiler room that can only be accessed from outside. First floor was originally radiant, now baseboard.

Boiler is a Dunkirk Empire, oil-fired w/tankless coil. No gas in house and no room for an indirect. Oil company has this boiler maxed out- 2 GPH!

Three zones with circs. Only the first-floor zone is connected to the triple aquastat so the circ drops out if the water temp gets too low. The other two are ordinary circ relays. This is probably why they have the boiler firing at such a frighteningly high rate.

I'd like to do the following:

1- install an updated aquastat (AquaSmart or HydroStat) to gain control of water temp above that required to operate the coil;

2- wire the circs so they drop out if the boiler drops below the minimum coil temp. I'd prefer to use a zone panel to do this but haven't found one that will let me power the circs, but not the panel's relay logic, through the aquastat. Yes, I could do this with R845 or similar relays but that would be a lot more wiring.

Thanks in advance for any suggestions.
All Steamed Up, Inc.
Towson, MD, USA
Steam, Vapor & Hot-Water Heating Specialists
Oil & Gas Burner Service
Consulting

Comments

  • EdTheHeaterMan
    EdTheHeaterMan Member Posts: 7,713
    edited September 2022
    Fagabout-it! Look at my second post. No relay needed

    This might work. This WILL work.

    Whether you use a L1824 or the Aqusmart or the Hydrolevel control, the C1 and C2 will power a 120 V circulator for heat and stop the 120 V circulator when there is insufficient temperature in the boiler for DHW. If you connect a relay with 120V coil to the C1 and C2 terminals you will power the relay coil. If you use a set of NC contacts, when ever the C1 has power the NC contacts will open.

    If you wire these contacts to a 4 zone Circulator relay with priority zone, the priority zone will be energized whenever the C1 on the aquastat relay is in DHW priority mode. This will disable all the circulators on the three non priority zones.

    Once the boiler has recovered temperature sufficient to supply heat, the C1 on the aquastat will power up and open the Priority zone circuit. Thus allowing the circulators on the 3 space heat zones to operate

    Edit: I should have put the X X from the SR504 to the Aqua-Smart TR and TW terminals @Steamhead ... but you already know that.
    Edward F Young. Retired HVAC ContractorSpecialized in Residential Oil Burner and Hydronics
  • EdTheHeaterMan
    EdTheHeaterMan Member Posts: 7,713
    edited September 2022
    I believe there is another way to do it without the NC relay by using the ZC and ZR on each of the two controls. I'll look at that to see if we can eliminate the need for a relay.

    EDIT
    It appears that the original Taco SR503 relay has already taken care of your needs.

    By removing the factory installed jumper between the ZC and ZR on the SR503 and connecting the ZC from the SR503 to the aquastat ZC and connecting the ZR from the SR503 to the ZR on the aquastat, the problem is solved. All circulators are on the C1-ZC circuit for the DHW priority. The ZR from the SR503 will operate the burner as needed on a call for heat even if the DHW is satisfied and the Hi lim is not yet reached.

    Edward F Young. Retired HVAC ContractorSpecialized in Residential Oil Burner and Hydronics
  • HVACNUT
    HVACNUT Member Posts: 5,804
    The diagram by Ed would definitely work, but leaving the existing aquastat and adding a 2 zone control panel in lieu of the separate relays and utilizing the ZR,ZC terminals. That will control power to the circulators based on the low limit setting to help ensure sufficient domestic hot water. 
    Upgrading to the Hydrostat or Aquasmart wouldn't benefit too much with the tankless coil. You can't use the economy settings and the existing triple has condensate protection because of the low limit.
    EdTheHeaterManSTEVEusaPA
  • hot_rod
    hot_rod Member Posts: 22,022
    The Caleffi relays have remote enable contacts that may simplify this. Connect 24- 120VAC to that connection.
    Bob "hot rod" Rohr
    trainer for Caleffi NA
    Living the hydronic dream
  • Steamhead
    Steamhead Member Posts: 16,796
    Thanks! We'll see how it works.
    All Steamed Up, Inc.
    Towson, MD, USA
    Steam, Vapor & Hot-Water Heating Specialists
    Oil & Gas Burner Service
    Consulting
  • Steamhead
    Steamhead Member Posts: 16,796
    HVACNUT said:

    The diagram by Ed would definitely work, but leaving the existing aquastat and adding a 2 zone control panel in lieu of the separate relays and utilizing the ZR,ZC terminals. That will control power to the circulators based on the low limit setting to help ensure sufficient domestic hot water. 
    Upgrading to the Hydrostat or Aquasmart wouldn't benefit too much with the tankless coil. You can't use the economy settings and the existing triple has condensate protection because of the low limit.

    @HVACNUT , the existing aquastat on this boiler keeps it at 180°F all the time. I'm pretty sure a more-advanced control like a HydroStat or AquaSmart could maintain a lower temp when there is no call for heat, and ramp up when a call does come in.
    All Steamed Up, Inc.
    Towson, MD, USA
    Steam, Vapor & Hot-Water Heating Specialists
    Oil & Gas Burner Service
    Consulting
  • Steamhead
    Steamhead Member Posts: 16,796
    @EdTheHeaterMan , do you know if the expandable Taco relays (as SR503-EXP) would work the same way?
    All Steamed Up, Inc.
    Towson, MD, USA
    Steam, Vapor & Hot-Water Heating Specialists
    Oil & Gas Burner Service
    Consulting
  • 109A_5
    109A_5 Member Posts: 1,377
    Hello @Steamhead,
    Would this work for what you want to do ?

    See manual page 25, there are other examples too.
    https://s3.amazonaws.com/s3.supplyhouse.com/product_files/Beckett-7610A0001U-Manual.pdf



    National - U.S. Gas Boiler 45+ Years Old
    Steam 300 SQ. FT. - EDR 347
    One Pipe System
  • HVACNUT
    HVACNUT Member Posts: 5,804
    Steamhead said:
    The diagram by Ed would definitely work, but leaving the existing aquastat and adding a 2 zone control panel in lieu of the separate relays and utilizing the ZR,ZC terminals. That will control power to the circulators based on the low limit setting to help ensure sufficient domestic hot water. 
    Upgrading to the Hydrostat or Aquasmart wouldn't benefit too much with the tankless coil. You can't use the economy settings and the existing triple has condensate protection because of the low limit.
    @HVACNUT , the existing aquastat on this boiler keeps it at 180°F all the time. I'm pretty sure a more-advanced control like a HydroStat or AquaSmart could maintain a lower temp when there is no call for heat, and ramp up when a call does come in.
    A triple acting aquastat will maintain the low setting and only go to the High limit setting on a space heat demand. 
    mattmia2MikeAmann
  • EdTheHeaterMan
    EdTheHeaterMan Member Posts: 7,713
    edited September 2022
    The existing L8124 if still working properly should be able to maintain a lower temperature setting by setting the LO LIMIT to a minimum temperature of something like 150° or 160°. and setting the DIFF to something like 10° or 15°. Then you can set the HI LIMIT to 180° or 190°

    By using the the aquastat with the SR503 (I believe either one will work) and connecting the ZC and ZR as I indicated above, all the zone circulators will provide DHW priority.

    The problem with the L8124 X-XXXX of any style, IS that most oil burner, Gas heat, Plumber, HVAC, and Electricians... don't take the time to read and understand the installation instructions. This leads to insufficient or erratic DHW when adding a second, third, or more space heating zones. But you can fix that with a bigger nozzle obviously... from what you found.

    So @Steamhead, the answer to your query about SR503-EXP is YES.

    Edward F Young. Retired HVAC ContractorSpecialized in Residential Oil Burner and Hydronics
    MikeAmann
  • MikeAmann
    MikeAmann Member Posts: 996
    @Steamhead
    from above, you said, Only the first-floor zone is connected to the triple aquastat
    Why is it running off of the HI limit?
  • Steamhead
    Steamhead Member Posts: 16,796
    MikeAmann said:

    @Steamhead
    from above, you said, Only the first-floor zone is connected to the triple aquastat
    Why is it running off of the HI limit?

    Got me. We were there to work on another part of the system so I didn't dig into this, just observed it.
    All Steamed Up, Inc.
    Towson, MD, USA
    Steam, Vapor & Hot-Water Heating Specialists
    Oil & Gas Burner Service
    Consulting
  • EdTheHeaterMan
    EdTheHeaterMan Member Posts: 7,713
    @Steamhead, You can connect all the zones to a SR503 and no circulators to the C1 on the L8124. You then connect the ZC and ZR as shown. There is no need to connect the XX of the SR503 to the TT of the L:8124. The ZR will bring the burner on, without the need for the TT as designed for use the old way with RA845XXXX. The SR503 will operate the burner thru ZR as needed. The ZC will stop circulators if boiler temperature falls below the Low Limit/Diff. setting as designed.

    Only replace the L8124 if there is a problem with it. Sometimes Simple is better than those new fangled electronic thig-a-ma-gigs.
    Edward F Young. Retired HVAC ContractorSpecialized in Residential Oil Burner and Hydronics
    MikeAmann
  • sequoiasoon
    sequoiasoon Member Posts: 1
    Good Morning,
    1st post here but many hours over the years reading learning. Great help from many, thank you. Over the years I have help install about a dozen boilers, mostly Weil McLain’s with SuperStor indirects.

    My daughter is renting a house at school, keeps running out of hot water now that the heating season is here. No issues prior to that always plenty of hot water.

    House has a Utica BC3T boiler, tankless coil, 3 zones (circulators) all wired controlled by Taco SR503-4. Honeywell 8124 Aquastat 180 upper limit, 160 lower limit, 10 degree differential.

    From what I can see going through pictures/video with my daughter. When installed the ZC/ZR from TACO is not wired to Aquastat. Only wires from TACO are the XX (isolated end switch) going to TT on the Honeywell. Nothing is stopping the circulators from running once boiler reaches the low limit. When she called, boiler was down to 120F, Beckett head running, 3 circulators running but not recovering great. Service company on last visit put in a smaller nozzle also (.75 – 80B) but original spec was .85-80B.

    My question based on the above details is if we connect the ZC/ZR from TACO to Honeywell, do I disconnect the XX/TT also? Will the ZC/ZR cover and tell the boiler to fire? She is about 2 hours away from me and they have a service contract. She will call them but I’d like to give her the information to explain to technician and maybe help. I don’t want her to have to call service or landlord multiple times to get it fixed correctly.

    I have pictures of all of it. ZC/ZR jumper is still in place on SR503-4. My daughter is excellent at following directions and no fear with projects but not up for rewiring (yet).

    Thank you again for your help.