Can a new steam system be installed in a new residential house?
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@ChrisJ "My next question is, you say 200F is ok but 12 degrees hotter isn't? Can you explain please? That's a 6% increase."
OK, but the claim was made up-thread that steam allows for smaller radiators. The output of a radiator is determined by the temperature, so smaller radiators means hotter surface. It's either hotter or it isn't…
"This allows the massive radiators to keep heating the space while the boiler is off. The system doesn't behave like it's turning on and off, similar to a concrete radiant floor, just not as massive obviously."
This is only beneficial in a leaky, drafty house where if you're not always getting heat it's chilly. In a house built to modern standards you get overshooting with this kind of emitter. The pinnacle of comfort is a hot-water boiler with outdoor reset where the water temperature adjusts to meet the heating load and you get very constant indoor temperatures.
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The radiators are hotter, but you do not go from a room temperature radiator to a 212F radiator within a minute. Maybe 30-40 minutes of run time. That radiator then takes time to cool down. That all depends on how long the system has to run to produce the needed heat. The entire radiator rarely heats, unlike a hot water system.
I'm using an outdoor reset with my steam system which results in very little if any overshoot, but you are correct, it's much more important in a drafty house. That's a very good point! I live in a very old drafty house, so I often forget that.
But, if it's not important in a modern house, I guess we might as well just go with forced air, no? That also alleviates the problem of trying to find people who can work on the system, which is just about as bad with hot water as it is with steam these days. At least it seems like it is.
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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And in a leaky house forced air makes it noticeably draftier.
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I know this to be true if the returns are undersized or non-existent from my own experiences in older houses etc, but I was under the impression that a properly designed and implemented system wouldn't have any effect at all in regards to draftiness?
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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Installing forced air well requires just as much skill as steam….
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I can agree with that.
But doesn't hot water require the same level of skill as well?
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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More or less, but I would say that hot water is the most forgiving of the 3 to make it work well. You have the most leeway to adjust to make up for bad design. Forced air is most likely that you'll get some sort of heat if you have screwed it up but is hardest to fix of you got it wrong.
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Unless there is a supply and a return in every room forced air is going to work by pressurizing parts of the house with supplies and depressurizing where the returns are in order to create air flow. But air goes where it wants to go, not where you want it to go. If you're pressurizing and depressurizing the house you're going to increase air infiltration.
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I always loved my inlaws house in the winter because the floors and walls were warm and the steam heat kept them that way.
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For new steam:
Definitely 2 pipe mini tube like the Iron Fireman systems.
I also would like TRVs on each rad and vacuum.
Why wouldn't this be the best system?
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It requires a tank and pump I think for additional complexity
And almost no one in the world will know how to service it or how it works
I’d prefer one pipe for those reasons
NJ Steam Homeowner.
Free NJ and remote steam advice: https://heatinghelp.com/find-a-contractor/detail/new-jersey-steam-help/
See my sight glass boiler videos: https://bit.ly/3sZW1el0 -
One pipe is cool. But one pipe always requires the boiler to be matched to the EDR plus piping and pickup, not the actual building heat loss.
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@Eastman : "Why wouldn't this be the best system?"
All right, let's think a bit about what the "billionaire's HVAC" system looks like.
Each room is independently controlled. In each room there are sensors for:
- Temperature, and some way of heating and cooling and keeping the temperature within a fraction of a degree of the set point;
- Humidity, and some way of adjusting the humidity to keep it within a couple of points of the set point;
- Indoor air quality, and some way of providing fresh air if CO2 or VOC's exceed a comfortable level
Of course the house is air-tight and well-insulated so that it is free from drafts and soundproof.
The system is as unobtrusive as possible, quiet, draft-free and visually unobtrusive.
All of those functions except for heat require that you move air around. There are different ways of doing it, but you're probably going to have ductwork.
I would argue that the heating system that best meets these goals is heating elements embedded in the floor, walls or ceiling. Probably this would be tubing containing hot water, but there are other ways of doing it. For such a system the temperatures would have to be kept low, so I don't see a role for steam in such a system.
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I really like radiant floors too. But you don't get to see the heating system. Also, the temperature of the emitter has a dramatic effect on the nature of the spectrum of thermal energy radiated. Radiant floors can also have more lag depending on how it's implemented.
When you're on the top, you build castles of stone with big fireplaces. Not engineered wall assemblies that rot out after the slightest disturbance.
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@Eastman : "Also, the temperature of the emitter has a dramatic effect on the nature of the spectrum of thermal energy radiated."
If you have a tight, well-insulated house that stops being important. What you want is heat so even you can't even tell if it's on or not.
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@hot_rod : "Accomplished with 110° supply water generated at 97° efficiency or 3 COP :)"
That always feels good to me. Warms my heart, warms me from the inside out.
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Warm floors might not be warm in a tight well insulated house. The best comfort doesn't necessarily occur in an environment that is near a static state of thermal equilibrium. Think of a breezy summer day outside. There's a giant high temperature radiator in the sky and it's drafty.
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Well in this thread we are building a new house, so that should be no problem.
NJ Steam Homeowner.
Free NJ and remote steam advice: https://heatinghelp.com/find-a-contractor/detail/new-jersey-steam-help/
See my sight glass boiler videos: https://bit.ly/3sZW1el0 -
Not with new builds out here!
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That's true. If you were starting fresh the EDR would hopefully be correct. But that's still kinda an amorphous target. With a 2 pipe system, I would think it would be a lot easier to implement dynamic EDR with TRVs. And then you could have a lot more fun sizing the boiler, or implementing staged firing, etc.
We need Smart TRVs for one pipe. The farthest radiator vent shouldn't open up until there's proof of steam at the end of the main, and then each radiator should open in sequence running towards the boiler. And then repeat the process each cycle.
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I've never needed any of this with my 1 pipe system. Steam doesn't really start going out to the radiators until the main vents close. Yeah it will kinda start making it's way out but barely.
I find my 1 pipe system with trvs to be much more flexible than a forced air system.
Id probably still go with 1 pipe just for simplicity and the least amount of space taken up by piping.
Of course id still need duct work for my AC......
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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this reminds me, i need to go start up the humidifier before it gets dark out.
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I have the same issue with my recently installed Air to Air hp. Blowing luke warm air is not so comfortable to me, even with stat at 70°
The minute the back up gas kicks on, when ambient drops below 40 I suddenly feel warmer again.
I suppose everyone has their own definition of "comfort" IAQ, humidity control all enter into the question.
I suppose once the radiators cool below skin temperature the effect is the same as a cool radiant floor? Or radiators that don't run often in that tight, well insulated house?
If I have a tight well insulated home do I need to drive water through a phase change at steam temperatures to maintain 70°F? Seems like that is going to cost more of the fuel dollars up the flue?
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream0 -
I have trvs on 5 out of 10 radiators and I'm using a Honeywell Prestige with 3 remote sensors that average the temperature from those 3 rooms + the thermostat.
The trvs are set to whatever I want in those rooms. For example 64 in my bedroom. 68 in another and I think 72 in the livingroom, 70ish in the kitchen.
Single pipe 392sqft system with an EG-40 rated for 325sqft and it's silent and balanced at all times.
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Here's a question to mull:
Which would you rather have: a poorly done forced air system, a poorly done hot water system, or a poorly done steam system? Why?
It's like one of those "who would you rather fight" questions.
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My home was built 26 years ago, basement is finished, so not a lot of options to correct ducting. Although they did locate return air ducting to multiple locations upstairs and down. It is a full variable speed blower so at least it gets quieter as it ramps down :)
I'd guess 80-90% of residential systems are poorly, if at all designed.
Radiant systems that started, were designed, at the radiant manufacturer, rep, wholesaler at least stand a chance.
I can't recall in my 40 plus years in the plumbing heating/ construction business ever seeing a residential engineered FA design? A load calc and ducting design. How many have you seen in your years in the industry?
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream0 -
It's in the eye, or the butt of the beholder😙
I see a sunset date on the qualified residential steam designers/ installers. The small numbers tend to hang around here, luckily.
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream-1 -
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George at Harry Cooper Supply in Missouri would do heat cool loads and duct design for residential jobs. He had a drawer full of old cardboard slide rules :) did everything long hand!
But I wonder how many of his designs got purchased and installed as designed. The low bidder, or know it all contractors, tend to value engineer HVAC jobs
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream2 -
they do it on our commercial contracts even when the contract says they can't(for basically every trade from plumbing to furniture)
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But then you have to warm your mittens on the floor:)
I agree though in floor is nice. We have the under tile mats in our bathrooms.
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Iron Fireman SelecTemp
"A thermostat in every room"
3/4 inch steam main and 1/2 inch return
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I like that the brochure shows an "invalid room." In my house that's my workshop.
The circulator fan powered by a steam turbine is pretty nifty.
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I like the turbines but I don't like the convectors. It would be better if the turbines powered an electrical outlet. Proper heat is to be radiated, not conveyed. But yeah who doesn't want turbine power for something.
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I had a pleasant chat with the fellow that has his companies office in the Iron Fireman building in Spokane, Washington, He was looking for a complete Iron Fireman coal stoker to put in his building to highlight his buildings origin and history. I am not sure if he found an intact Iron Fireman Coal Stoker to display it in the building entrance/foyer.
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