Any millivolt system boilers still available?
I have an old Pennsylvania Furnace Company boiler from the early 1960's still running fine. But due to age and condition, I know at some point I have to get something new. It is a millivolt system. I want to replace it with another millivolt system so I will still have heat in a blackout. Do they make modern millivolt system steam boilers today that dont have a need for any transformers?
Comments
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No. Millivolt systems no longer meet energy-efficiency requirements.
All Steamed Up, Inc.
Towson, MD, USA
Steam, Vapor & Hot-Water Heating Specialists
Oil & Gas Burner Service
Consulting1 -
Agree
But that does not mean that you can't get those old style parts brand new in the box and put them on the boiler after the job has been inspected. A steam boiler is the easiest piece of equipment to do that to. There are no circulators or zone valves involved. Just a high limit pressure control and a mechanical LWCO will make the minimum safety requirements You wont have the auto vent damper and electronic ignition but you will also not have frozen pipes during a power failure.
Edward Young Retired
After you make that expensive repair and you still have the same problem, What will you check next?
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These power stations come in many sized. You could run a 24V system for days, maybe weeks with a large enough pack. Very handy for camping, tailgating and other remote uses.
I power lights and chargers and a small fridge in my camper for 4 days with a mid sized unit.
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream1 -
What are the idle losses of that inverter, if the inverter is on but has no load? When I have run salvaged ~1kw UPSs to power something like a cable modem with a pots bridge it seemed like the power to the load was negligible compared to the quiescent current of the inverter. Is that still a problem with these, if you want to power a small load for a long period of time you have to frankenstein a big battery in to a tiny ups.
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Idle consumption varies based on the model ad size of the inverter. A few online sites test and publish that data for various brands and models.
I keep mine plugged into a 200W PV array on my camper, or at home into a wall charger. So it is always up to speed for power needs.
Or convert you boiler to DC volt, and switch off the inverter
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream0 -
wouldn't converting it to dc be the same effort as converting it to millivolt?:)
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I think a power station as @hot_rod mentioned is the best bet to keep a boiler on. No sense hacking in some millivolt controls.
The pressure control, LWCO and thermostat would have to be millivolt rated
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This is what I have my System hooked into if I lose power.
I just have a pigtail that I can plug into this.
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I guess it comes down to how often the OP has blackouts, how long they last, how much power the boiler needs, and how much $$ they want to spend on a back up system.
I imagine hacking a new boiler, converting the control would void warranty and put any failure liability on the hacker
Bob "hot rod" Rohr
trainer for Caleffi NA
Living the hydronic dream1
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