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inject into a gravity system

Adk1guy
Adk1guy Member Posts: 61
I have a 3 story 4 unit apt house with the original gravity system, original boiler, and expansion/over flow tank in the attic. Because I can buy propane for 55% of oil per million btu, I'd like to put in a condensing propane boiler and inject hot water into the gravity boiler. What are the pitfalls and should i put hot water into the top and draw from the bottom? As an aside, I had a realtor tell me my boiler was on it's last legs because his boiler cracked after 15 years. Mine has to be 80 or 90 years old. They don't make them like they used to.

Comments

  • hot_rod
    hot_rod Member Posts: 22,022
    It would be best to parallel pipe the boilers so either or could run without flowing through the off line boiler.

    If the LP boiler flows through the oil boiler a portion of you heat goes up that flue as the cast block warms. You might waste more than you gain from the LP?

    Depending on the type of high efficiency boiler, you may need to do a primary secondary piping. That would involve 3 circulators. The building, the oil boiler and the LP boiler.
    Bob "hot rod" Rohr
    trainer for Caleffi NA
    Living the hydronic dream
  • EdTheHeaterMan
    EdTheHeaterMan Member Posts: 7,720
    edited November 2022
    You could inject the hot water into the gravity system, but that makes oil fired boiler hot. That heated boiler will absorb heat like a radiator in order to have the gravity design work. The vent connection to the chimney will act as a vacuum cleaner sucking the heat from that big radiator (THE BOILER) up the chimney unnecessarily.

    @hot_rod has the best idea. Turn that old gravity system into a forced hot water boiler. Add circulator and flow check valves as needed. The large capacity cast iron pipes and radiators will actually be a good fit for the condensing exhaust LP boiler you are proposing.
    Edward F Young. Retired HVAC ContractorSpecialized in Residential Oil Burner and Hydronics
    MikeAmann
  • mattmia2
    mattmia2 Member Posts: 9,574
    Unless you really want the dual fuel option, you could also replace the oil burner with a propane power burner. It is very questionable if any of these options will pay back what it costs you to implement them.
  • EBEBRATT-Ed
    EBEBRATT-Ed Member Posts: 15,453
    I would double check the fuel prices. Propane at 55% of oil doesn't sound rigt but maybe in these crazy times it is.
  • Adk1guy
    Adk1guy Member Posts: 61
    I would gleefully cap the flue after temporarily disabling the burner because I am aware of how the chimney is sucking the heat out of that gravity oil boiler right now as I type.

    I don't want to convert the gravity system to forced hot water for several reasons:
    1. Its already heating season. I can set up a wall hung gas boiler and tie in without shutting the heat off.
    2. Speed. Wall hung, low loss header, magnetic filter, two circulators.
    3.Avoid the wait for asbestos abatement.
    4. The building might get torn down for repurposing the lot. Why sink a mint into the conversion? The asbestos will be abated if demolished but I won't have to reinsulate as I would have to if abated now.

    I am fairly confident on fuel pricing. I owned fuel oil and propane biz 34 years , plus I currently pay bills for several commercial properties.

    Writing this jogged my memory and now I remember doing this same thing with coal boilers in the 80's. We injected into the existing boilers to serve as a mixing vessel and they already had the distribution system set up. They all worked fine including a gravity job. I think we injected and returned at the bottom of the boilers.

    I'm almost done with my 1st conversion at my residence. My masonry chimney has always been very warm to the touch all winter and I am looking forward to capping the flue.

  • EdTheHeaterMan
    EdTheHeaterMan Member Posts: 7,720
    Sounds like you have already made the correct decision.
    You could inject the hot water into the gravity system, but that makes oil fired boiler hot. That heated boiler will absorb heat like a radiator in order to have the gravity design work.
    then cap off the chimney
    Edward F Young. Retired HVAC ContractorSpecialized in Residential Oil Burner and Hydronics
  • Adk1guy
    Adk1guy Member Posts: 61
    converting an oil fired boiler to gas fired is a heart breaker. Boilers and furnaces designed to burn gas have much smaller passages than oil fired. Especially with an 80 year old boiler. When they went from coal to oil they used the same boiler and just put a different dry base with a combustion chamber under it. They have big clean out doors that reveals big passages with lots of room for fly ash to accumulate which of course isn't a problem when burning oil. We used to stack bricks or pipe nipples with caps inn those spaces to force the gases closer to the surfaces to increase efficiency. Installing a gas burner on one of these big open passage boilers would only make the gas provider happy.
  • jumper
    jumper Member Posts: 2,228
    Adk1guy said:

    converting an oil fired boiler to gas fired is a heart breaker. Boilers and furnaces designed to burn gas have much smaller passages than oil fired. Especially with an 80 year old boiler. When they went from coal to oil they used the same boiler and just put a different dry base with a combustion chamber under it. They have big clean out doors that reveals big passages with lots of room for fly ash to accumulate which of course isn't a problem when burning oil. We used to stack bricks or pipe nipples with caps inn those spaces to force the gases closer to the surfaces to increase efficiency. Installing a gas burner on one of these big open passage boilers would only make the gas provider happy.

    I agree with the above so I replaced big boilers converted to gas with nice little gas boilers. Gas bills decreased but not dramatically. Gas was less expensive then so now savings are worthwhile.

  • Adk1guy
    Adk1guy Member Posts: 61
    edited August 2023
    back again to revisit this post. I totally forgot that early in my career, (opec embargo), my Father who forgot more than most people know about coal boilers hot water and steam had me set up coal fired boilers injecting into gravity and forced hot water oil boilers. It worked very well with the gravity boiler. We set up the circ feeding the oil boiler from the coal boiler on the one thermoset in the house (disconnected the oil burner. The thermostat was in series with what we called an indoor/outdoor control made by Dayton from Grangers, we now call that reset. We called it constant circulation modulated temperature in the forced hot water systems. That was during the oil embargo. We also built coal bins that would hold a tractor trailer dump transport full of coal and bought it direct from the mines. They held about 3/4 of the load and I would be literally chest deep in the coal bin shoveling the coal into the corners, and there was still a pile outside.
    We used axeman anderson antratube boilers btw. My Brother has several of these he still uses today, he buys bagged coal locally.
  • EdTheHeaterMan
    EdTheHeaterMan Member Posts: 7,720
    Late in my fathers life, he decided to open up a "Energy Store" in Cape May County NJ during the "Embargo" years. It was an old Sunoco gas station in the 1950s and 60s. The repair garage bays were converted into retail space where we offered KeroSun space heaters, wood stoves and fireplace inserts, we did maintenance on those space heaters and sold wicks and other parts for them. There were two of our underground tanks dedicated to Diesel/#2 heating oil (Before the Dye was introduced) and the other was K1 Kerosene.

    The reason that popped into my mind is because @Adk1guy mentioned "bags of coal". When my father, John Young was just out of high school, he delivered Coal for the family business. A ton of coal might have cost around $19.00 at some point in his career as a young truck driver. He would tell the stories about lugging coal from the truck to the coal shoot in 100 pound bags in the snow, up hill (in both directions LOL). But what was interesting was that in 1970s our "Energy Store" had a sign just under the gasoline price per gallon sign that read "100 lb. Coal $19.95". We were able to tell him "Dad, You know your getting old when you can only get 100 lbs. of something for the same price as you used to deliver a ton of for that price"
    Edward F Young. Retired HVAC ContractorSpecialized in Residential Oil Burner and Hydronics