We've been without heat or (more importantly) hot water since yesterday morning. We have oil heat with an indirect water heater - the boiler provides a heating loop into the water storage tank. The overall problem is that there's no water in the boiler. This is the result of 2 actionable problems: 1) the feeder valve is broken, so no water is
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i had tankless at the pond house too, but it froze and died b/c basement and disuse :/
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Actually considered it for the master bath, but it would also require a new 220V run (vs 2 or 3 new runs for a whole-house electric), plus plumbing and carpentry. (Or a 2nd floor gas line and vent, when we get plumbed for gas.)
i had tankless at the pond house too, but it froze and died b/c basement and disuse :/
I remembered you had taken out the tankless, but I'd forgotten why. Our basement gets enough heat bleed from the upstairs and the oil burner that we've never had to worry about freezing pipes.
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the tankless at and/or has always been fine, but its basement coexists with the half-dozen gas-fired appliances and heat leak from upstairs as well.
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As far as I can tell, they are never worth it.
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But our long-term plan is most likely gas+gas (plus un-fucking the plumbing), so too many variables to compare.
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Still, I don't recommend oil hot water - unless you're an apartment building, it's not worth the cost. Even we're borderline. I'd like to figure out how to replace it with natural gas.
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If you're looking to have someone replace your boiler, I recommend Ed Grant of Grant Burner Service in Haverhill. He specializes in boilers (steam and forced hot water systems). During the summer he's willing to travel further.
http://heatingrepairhaverhill.com/
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In addition to the additional 220 circuits that you would need to run, a whole house electric demand heater might require an electric service upgrade. These things use so much power that internally you need multiple 240V circuits.
Say you want 2 gallons per minute at 120F with 40F water coming in. You need 23.5KW, or about 100A at 240V. I would not install a large electric demand heater without a careful evaluation of the electric service and of the transformer supplying the service. I have heard stories about demand heaters making the lights flicker at the neighbors houses.
I also have 1 complaint about gas demand heater for the andor huge tub: I liked to take long showers with the water flow rate turned way down. I learned the hard (or cold) way about minimum flow rates. But it was sure nice for _filling_ the tub.
-ETR
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http://energy.gov/energysaver/articles/drain-water-heat-recovery
http://www.renewability.com/power_pipe/index.html
Agent Orange is even selling them now: http://www.homedepot.com/p/Power-Pipe-2-in-x-60-in-Drain-Water-Heat-Recovery-Unit-R2-60/203455947
Payback time is estimated at 2-10 years by Environment Canada. They're apparently quite popular up there.
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