Sunday, April 22, 2012

How to kill a workhorse

The vast majority of residential hot water boilers in service today are cast-iron mid-efficiency boilers. These are the workhorses of the hydronic industry and have been for many years. Installed and maintained properly, they can provide reliable service for 30 years or more. They typically have efficiency ratings in the low 80% range, meaning about 80 cents of every fuel dollar spent is converted to useable heat. The rest is lost up the chimney.

Older cast-iron water boilers from the early part of the 1900s were larger and held more water volume than today’s models. While this larger volume of water acted as a buffer and helped to smooth out some of the variability in water temperatures, it was at the expense of some efficiency. Today’s cast-iron boilers are smaller, and consequentially more efficient, but are less forgiving when it comes to handling low water temperatures.

Sustained low water temperatures can cause flue gasses inside the boiler to cool to the point that they condense on the relatively cool cast-iron heat-exchanger surfaces. This condensate is corrosive and will attack the bare metal surfaces of the boiler, creating rust and scale that can plug flue passageways and interfere with the operation of the burner. At its worst, this condition will allow dangerous products of combustion to enter your home. But at a minimum, it will shorten the useful life of your boiler. Today’s cast-iron boilers need to maintain water temperatures above the 130° - 140°F temperature range to prevent flue gas condensation.

The key to maintaining these safe water temperatures lies in your boiler's ability to produce heat at a faster rate than your house can use it.

Copper finned-tube baseboard
An example of a system that would work well is a home with copper finned-tube baseboard and small copper distribution piping. Many homes built in the 50s and 60s fit this description. Considered a “low-mass” distribution system, its copper tubing and light-weight baseboard emitters heat up quickly. These systems are usually designed for fairly high operating temperatures—typically 180°F. Assuming the boiler is sized properly to the home’s heat loss, it can come up to temperature quickly and has no trouble staying ahead of the home’s heating load. Water returning to the boiler will remain above the 130° - 140°F range for most of each heating cycle.

Where flue gas condensation problems start to develop are in high-temperature/high-mass systems, or low-temperature/high- or low-mass systems.

Cast-iron radiator.
A very common high-temperature/high-mass system where sustained flue gas condensation needs to be considered is an older (early 1900s) home with cast-iron radiators and large steel distribution piping. There are literally tons of cast iron and steel, and hundreds of gallons of cold water that need to come up to temperature before the radiators can start heating your rooms. This can easily overwhelm a properly sized boiler and cause it to run at sub-130° temperatures for long periods of time.

Another type of system that can overwhelm a boiler is a radiant in-floor system of tubes in concrete. This one is a one-two punch for your boiler. Not only are these systems designed to run at low water temperatures (110°F is typical) but the entire concrete slab must be heated before it can start delivering room heat. Some of these systems take days to recover from set-back. And the flue gasses are condensing the whole time. It’s a recipe for disaster.

One recent trend I’ve been seeing is for radiant in-floor tubes to be stapled to the underside of the subfloor and connected directly to a cast-iron boiler. This type of installation would typically run at 100° - 130°F water temperatures. The installer simply turns the boiler aquastat, or temperature setting, down to 120° and walks away. This system will likely condense for its entire—albeit short—life.

The effects of flue-gas condensation.
I’ve serviced boilers subjected to these conditions, and believe me, they’re not pretty. Sometimes there are piles of rust on top of the burners.

The good news is there are ways to protect your cast-iron boiler from low return water temperatures, extend its life, improve comfort and reduce your fuel consumption. Next week, I'll tell you my favorite solution to this problem.

Heidronically yours,

Wayne




2 comments:

  1. Positive site, where did u come up with the information on this posting? I'm pleased I discovered it though, ill be checking back soon to find out what additional posts you include.residential boiler

    ReplyDelete
  2. This article helps me in big amount. Thanks for putting a light on HVAC maintenance.

    Heating and Cooling Markham

    ReplyDelete