Steam venting from old vent on top of converted coal boiler
Hello all.
Relatively new first-time homeowner — this is my fourth winter in the house. I appreciate any help or advice.
I have an original coal-era cast-iron steam boiler in a 1925 Brooklyn house, converted to natural gas. It’s a one-pipe steam system with a pressuretrol on a pigtail, sight glass, and manual water feed (no automatic feeder). The boiler still has the original coal-era vent/cap on top.
Current issue
Steam is coming out of the old vent on top of the boiler. I believe this may have happened in the past (possibly during very cold spells), but under more typical Brooklyn winter temperatures I haven’t really noticed it.
Here’s what I’m seeing
- The steam sometimes sputters (steam with water droplets)
- Steam from that vent only occurs while the boiler is firing
- The steam stops completely when the burner shuts off
- Some radiator air vents vent small amounts of steam when this is happening
- Boiler water level in the sight glass remains stable
- The boiler continues to heat the house
- The issue is more noticeable during very cold weather with long run times
Questions
Anything I should be checking or doing immediately? What should I be looking at in the short term?
I do plan on updating the system, but that’s probably a separate discussion.
Pictures Below 👇
Thanks in advance.🙌
John B.
Comments
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It's likely that the old relief valve is finally failing. It's also likely that the leaky vents are are failing or gunked up. It's possible the boiler is making too much pressure which will compound the problems. Your pressure trol looks fine but I'd get the pigtail cleaned or replaced. From what you've posted I see nothing alarming.
Miss Hall's School service mechanic, greenhouse manager, teacher, dog walker and designated driver
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Thanks much🙏 I will have someone come and replace the valve and pigtail that and look things over. I am sure heating people are busy here in NYC right now..
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Honestly I have no idea how that home could have changed hands with that system in place! Sure, the boiler has lasted and will last longer than any boiler built today but wow that thing is old
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/3sZW1el1 -
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i bet that pressuretrol is old enough to have a mercury switch instead of the far inferior microswitch.
it could be over pressurizing and the relief valve is doing its job or it could be the relief valve failed.
like others said, check the pigtail is clear and maybe check the gauge and replace the ancient relief valve with a modern version piped to within 6" of the floor
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That is an original Marsh instruments steam pressure gauge, if anything I would only replace it with another Marsh Instruments pressure gauge. The Marsh Instruments Company has always made high quality pressure gauges. It would be worth calling the company and asking if they would recalibrate and pressure test this gauge for you if you are concerned.
I have a Marsh instruments triple gauge for my coal stoker boiler and I sleep very well at night because I know I have a high quality pressure gauge. Your current pressure gauge could be used on the new boiler too if and when you replace that beautiful hand fed coal boiler.
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Thanks for all this info. I am 100% replacing this unit and reconfiguinging / renovating this whole room.
Updates - i had boiler safety check (2 years ago) and they did remove and clean the pigtail. I dont think there is a LWC. I never have seen the pressure gauge move, not sure if i should be seeing it move.. below are more pictures. I will be looking at all that was suggested to get me through till its replaced.. Thanks for the continued advice.. 🙌
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Replacing that boiler is gonna cost you an arm and a leg. Not to scare you, but you are in Brooklyn I think you said? You are gonna need an asbestos abatement crew, probably a special permit for that in NYC. I know there is one for NJ. That is gonna need to be broke down and stripped in place.
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30psi gauges are required by code…they must read 2x the pressure relief valve rating (15psi). They are notorious for being very inaccurate at the low end of the readout. Best thing to do would be to install a Tee with two gauges…. a 0-30psi to make insurance happy, and a 0-3 or 0-5psi one so you can actually read what pressure you are operating at.
You can do all this work yourself, you only need a couple of wrenches.
For cleaning the pressuretrol:
- Turn off the power to the boiler.
- Remove the cover on the pressuretrol and disconnect the two wires and the conduit.
- Remove the pressuretrol by screwing the entire assembly lefty-loosey :) from the nut on the bottom.
- Run a large zip-tie or flexible pipe brush through the pigtail to clean it out.
- Reassemble in reverse order with some Teflon tape added to the threads on the pigtail.
The pressure relief valve should also be replaced, they are a maintenance item.
Don't be in too much of a rush to replace this piece of history. A new one will heat the building the same way….but it will likely be much more efficient and have some fuel savings associated with it. But it will cost some big coin to start saving on fuel.
It may not be a bad idea to retrofit a LWCO to this beast for safety reasons if it is even possible. If a plug exists somewhere near or just below the bottom of the site glass it can be removed and a probe-type LWCO can be added.
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One more comment because I like old stuff. If you add up the radiation of all of your steam radiators (EDR) and compare them to the square feet of steam capacity of your boiler you can determine how well your boiler is sized.
If it is properly sized it shouldn't build much pressure under normal operating conditions. You could upgrade to a vaporstat instead of a pressuretrol which limits the pressure to a lower maximum than a pressuretrol.
Replace your radiator vents with some MoM's (Maid O' Mist) or Gortons and you can fine tune and balance your whole system. Add or upgrade your main pipe venting and you'll be operating at the full potential (and comfort) of this boiler.
You'll also significantly reduce your operating costs by wasting less fuel. You'll be more comfortable too.
You will have to do this stuff anyways when you get a new boiler….but this will help you squeeze every dollar out of your existing setup and help it live a stress free life until you dump some big $$$ on a new one!
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Does it even have 24v for a probe LWCO? I assumed it was millivolt, can retrofit a 67G at the gauge cocks.
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I'd tune it up and milk that boiler until it dies. Could be a very long time.
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Add a#67 LWCO, new safety valve and clean pigtail and pressure control
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You get all those plus Hartford Loop, Header, and Equalizer on a new boiler from this century!
NJ Steam Homeowner.
Free NJ and remote steam advice: https://heatinghelp.com/find-a-contractor/detail/new-jersey-steam-help/
See my sight glass boiler videos: https://bit.ly/3sZW1el0 -
new boiler$$$$
Asbestos removal$$$$
Boiler install$$$$
Versus
LWCO $$$
Safety Valve$$
Pigtail$$
Labor$$$
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True enough, but there's also a chance the old boiler will rust through any day now.
In which case you are looking at:
new boiler$$$$
Asbestos removal$$$$
Boiler install$$$$
PLUS
LWCO $$$
Safety Valve$$
Pigtail$$
Labor$$$
and let's not forget the longer it does last the longer you have:
Inefficiency$$ (per year)
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 -
If he were able to save an $100/mo on his monthly heating bills I'd guesstimate it would probably take 25 years to pay back on a complete new boiler, asbestos removal and repiping. No way to know how soon the boiler would fail but these old boilers can tend to keep going a very long time. I'd add the lwco and relief valve, clean or replace the pigtail, test to make sure the pressuretrol is functioning properly, check to see if there is main venting present anywhere on the system and if not add and, replace the radiator vents that witness release of steam and don't close properly and repack or replace any inlet valves that leak. Much of this would have to be done with a new boiler from a system standpoint anyway.
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Full agreement!
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 -
converting a coil boiler to a gas wats the eff60, 65, 70% ?
When it’s time for resale all that asbestos and that antique will be lowering the value.
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