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Tom
 
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Default Help with replacing radiators with baseboard units

We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd rather
put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with baseboard heat. We
have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the "main" line and a
circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things. Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom


  #2   Report Post  
El-Jay
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I am definitely no expert in this area, but when I wanted to do the same
thing (replace 2 cast iron radiators with baseboard heat), every plumber and
plumbing supply house I spoke with said, "You can't mix copper baseboard
units with cast iron radiators".

Apparently they do sell cast iron baseboard-style radiators, but they are
extremely expensive. Also, there is some fomula they use that tells you how
many feet of the horizontal baseboard-style units it would take to replace
the heating value of each upright cast iron unit.

Bottom line for me was that I had a plumber replace two cracked cast iron
radiators with similar sized used radiators that came out of an old house.

"Tom" wrote in message
...
We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd
rather put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with baseboard
heat. We have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the "main"
line and a circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things. Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom



  #3   Report Post  
Bob Pietrangelo
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Radiators are extrmely expensive, especially old ones. You can mix teh
baseboards but you are going to have drastic temp swings. The heat value
for cast base board is about 560 btu per foot. If you are going to do this
why not remove the copper fin and just replace it with cast baseboard to,
much more durable product.

--
Bob Pietrangelo


www.comfort-solution.biz
On Time or Your Service Call is FREE
Preventive Maintenance Specialist




"El-Jay" wrote in message
...
I am definitely no expert in this area, but when I wanted to do the same
thing (replace 2 cast iron radiators with baseboard heat), every plumber

and
plumbing supply house I spoke with said, "You can't mix copper baseboard
units with cast iron radiators".

Apparently they do sell cast iron baseboard-style radiators, but they are
extremely expensive. Also, there is some fomula they use that tells you

how
many feet of the horizontal baseboard-style units it would take to replace
the heating value of each upright cast iron unit.

Bottom line for me was that I had a plumber replace two cracked cast iron
radiators with similar sized used radiators that came out of an old house.

"Tom" wrote in message
...
We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd
rather put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with baseboard
heat. We have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the

"main"
line and a circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things.

Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard

size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom





  #4   Report Post  
ElJay
 
Posts: n/a
Default

"Bob Pietrangelo" wrote in message
...
Radiators are extrmely expensive, especially old ones.


The two used cast iron radiators I bought weren't that expensive, but they
were not that easy to find locally. And, compared to the cost of new cast
iron radiators, they were cheap. The two used ones cost something like $100
and $75 dollars each (one was for a very small bedroom and the other for a
small bathroom -- so neither was very large). But, new cast iron radiators
the same size would have cost a few hundred dollars each, at least.. All of
this is just for the replacement radiators themselves, not labor. I bought
the two used cast iron radiators from a local, old-time, plumbing supply
place in an old inner-city neighborhood where they get them from old home
tear-downs. They pressure-check them and, if they are not cracked they sell
them for re-use. If they are cracked, they sell them to a scrap metal
dealer.


  #5   Report Post  
Doobielicious
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"El-Jay" wrote in message
...
I am definitely no expert in this area, but when I wanted to do the same
thing (replace 2 cast iron radiators with baseboard heat), every plumber

and
plumbing supply house I spoke with said, "You can't mix copper baseboard
units with cast iron radiators".


That's bull****!! You can mix copper with cast iron with a few simple
threaded fittings.





Apparently they do sell cast iron baseboard-style radiators, but they are
extremely expensive. Also, there is some fomula they use that tells you

how
many feet of the horizontal baseboard-style units it would take to replace
the heating value of each upright cast iron unit.

Bottom line for me was that I had a plumber replace two cracked cast iron
radiators with similar sized used radiators that came out of an old house.

"Tom" wrote in message
...
We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd
rather put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with baseboard
heat. We have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the

"main"
line and a circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things.

Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard

size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom







  #6   Report Post  
Edwin Pawlowski
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Doobielicious" wrote in message
newsbBYd.22490$i6.9834@edtnps90...

"El-Jay" wrote in message
...
I am definitely no expert in this area, but when I wanted to do the same
thing (replace 2 cast iron radiators with baseboard heat), every plumber

and
plumbing supply house I spoke with said, "You can't mix copper baseboard
units with cast iron radiators".


That's bull****!! You can mix copper with cast iron with a few simple
threaded fittings.


Sure you can. But what he was alluding to is the difference in performance.
CI retains heat for some time. Finned copper cools rather quickly. You
will have a greater temperature swing in the rooms with copper.


  #7   Report Post  
m Ransley
 
Posts: n/a
Default

As others have said mixing units wont respond the same in overall
comfort, your cast iron will retain heat for maybe an hour while even
cast iron baseboard will be cooled of much earlier. This will lead to
that room getting cool even while others are holding and radiating heat.
Cast iron have alot of mass, water and release the heat slower.

I was looking at heating a room someone-a hack, removed the large 4
ft x5 ft x 14" cast rads and put in forced air water units for more
furniture room, they never maintained even temps even though the Btu
was there. When the boiler went off so did the heat but the cast iron
kept warming for an hour. We got in real pro who pointed this out and
indicated a separate zone with new piping, thermostat and pump would be
necessary for him to guarantee comfort for baseboard or just put in the
same cast iron as was in the rest of the house, we went with cast iron
since this guy was a real pro that guarnteed his work in writing and did
everyones work in the town. Yes we are happy, it works as originaly
designed.

I dought you will ever be happy as the retention and slow heat
release of large cast iron will not be the same as baseboard unless you
run a separate zone, meaning piping, pump, and thermostat for baseboard.
Sure you can match the Btu but it wont hold the heat and the room will
cool faster when the boiler is not running, unbalancing your home.

Cast iron radiators sell for alot used and give great heat.

  #8   Report Post  
m Ransley
 
Posts: n/a
Default

7 yrs is a long time, a lawyer will tell you if you can persue it. How
do you know if only a few had improper fastening, the ones you fixed.
How can you check without ruining them

  #9   Report Post  
Bob Pietrangelo
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Doobie,
Under what premise can you mix the too, you can always make something fit,
hell that is easy. What I was wondering is what principles are you using to
make your statement that you can mix cu with ci.

--
Bob Pietrangelo


www.comfort-solution.biz
On Time or Your Service Call is FREE
Preventive Maintenance Specialist




"Doobielicious" wrote in message
newsbBYd.22490$i6.9834@edtnps90...

"El-Jay" wrote in message
...
I am definitely no expert in this area, but when I wanted to do the same
thing (replace 2 cast iron radiators with baseboard heat), every plumber

and
plumbing supply house I spoke with said, "You can't mix copper baseboard
units with cast iron radiators".


That's bull****!! You can mix copper with cast iron with a few simple
threaded fittings.





Apparently they do sell cast iron baseboard-style radiators, but they

are
extremely expensive. Also, there is some fomula they use that tells you

how
many feet of the horizontal baseboard-style units it would take to

replace
the heating value of each upright cast iron unit.

Bottom line for me was that I had a plumber replace two cracked cast

iron
radiators with similar sized used radiators that came out of an old

house.

"Tom" wrote in message
...
We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd
rather put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with

baseboard
heat. We have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the

"main"
line and a circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing

the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things.

Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard

size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom







  #10   Report Post  
Speedy Jim
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Bob Pietrangelo wrote:

Doobie,
Under what premise can you mix the too, you can always make something fit,
hell that is easy. What I was wondering is what principles are you using to
make your statement that you can mix cu with ci.

It's very common practice to use
threaded copper adapters with cast/
malleable iron fittings in both
Hydronic and Steam systems.

Corrosion doesn't seem to be nearly
as bad an issue as one would expect.
I'm no corrosion expert, but it may
be due to the fact that these closed
systems have little mineral and
dissolved oxygen content.

Jim


  #11   Report Post  
Bob Pietrangelo
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I thought you were saying it would provide proper heat. Sorry! Yes it is
eaey to do we do boiler retrofits like that. I always tape and dope though.

--
Bob Pietrangelo


www.comfort-solution.biz
On Time or Your Service Call is FREE
Preventive Maintenance Specialist




"Speedy Jim" wrote in message
...
Bob Pietrangelo wrote:

Doobie,
Under what premise can you mix the too, you can always make something

fit,
hell that is easy. What I was wondering is what principles are you

using to
make your statement that you can mix cu with ci.

It's very common practice to use
threaded copper adapters with cast/
malleable iron fittings in both
Hydronic and Steam systems.

Corrosion doesn't seem to be nearly
as bad an issue as one would expect.
I'm no corrosion expert, but it may
be due to the fact that these closed
systems have little mineral and
dissolved oxygen content.

Jim



  #12   Report Post  
Edwin Pawlowski
 
Posts: n/a
Default


"Tom" wrote in message
...
We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd
rather put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with baseboard
heat. We have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the "main"
line and a circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things. Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom


Thee is a web site from a plumbing supply house that has the information you
need. I used it recently at work and do not have the information here. A
google search may turn it up. You measure the radiator, count the sections
and multiply for the answer. Simple to do.

Are you planning to keep some of the radiators? If so, you may have a
balance problem witht he heat. Cast iron retains a lot of heat once the
circulator turns off. Finned copper tubing does not. While one room is
still basking in the warmth of the CI the other rooms will be cooled down
more. You can buy CI baseboard. It would have roughly the same properties
of heat retention as your present radiators.

There is information available he
http://www.burnham.com/radiator/58100.cfm I did not check it out, but they
may have a conversion chart. http://www.burnham.com/lit/Baseray4-04.pdf

IMO, cast iron is the best heating system you can have. The only thing
better than cast iron water is cast iron steam.



  #13   Report Post  
Bob Pietrangelo
 
Posts: n/a
Default

Ed as usually you are right on the money with your repply, I am sorry I
didn't read it before I posted, the only thing I think you are wrong about
is CI baseboard can't scratch a you know what when compared with the Rads.
It will though give himthe same BTU as the copper. This guy really has not
given enough info to help him. How many zones, what is on each zone. When
measuring rads it is a pain in the butt, you need how many sections, the
width and length of each section, and the number of passes for each section.
I can never figure it out I always call my Hydronic expert at my supply
house.

--
Bob Pietrangelo


www.comfort-solution.biz
On Time or Your Service Call is FREE
Preventive Maintenance Specialist




"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
...

"Tom" wrote in message
...
We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd
rather put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with baseboard
heat. We have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the

"main"
line and a circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things.

Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard

size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom


Thee is a web site from a plumbing supply house that has the information

you
need. I used it recently at work and do not have the information here. A
google search may turn it up. You measure the radiator, count the

sections
and multiply for the answer. Simple to do.

Are you planning to keep some of the radiators? If so, you may have a
balance problem witht he heat. Cast iron retains a lot of heat once the
circulator turns off. Finned copper tubing does not. While one room is
still basking in the warmth of the CI the other rooms will be cooled down
more. You can buy CI baseboard. It would have roughly the same

properties
of heat retention as your present radiators.

There is information available he
http://www.burnham.com/radiator/58100.cfm I did not check it out, but

they
may have a conversion chart. http://www.burnham.com/lit/Baseray4-04.pdf

IMO, cast iron is the best heating system you can have. The only thing
better than cast iron water is cast iron steam.





  #14   Report Post  
Tom
 
Posts: n/a
Default

I can understand the problem caused by the rapid heat loss of finned
baseboard compared to CI radiators, but wouldn't this be minimized by the
fact the circulator runs 100% of the time? Wouldn't the continuous
circulation of hot water keep the finned baseboards at the same temperature
the CI radiators are regardless of whether the boiler was heating or not?

And wouldn't CI baseboard units minimize this even more? My ground floor is
four large rooms, all mostly very open to each other with lots of air
circulation. There are 7 CI radiators spread throughout these rooms and I
want to replace two of them with something less obtrusive, like baseboard.
This is one zone, with constant water circulation, and it's hard for me to
see why CI baseboard would be such a problem.

Thanks,
Tom

"Bob Pietrangelo" wrote in message
...
Ed as usually you are right on the money with your repply, I am sorry I
didn't read it before I posted, the only thing I think you are wrong about
is CI baseboard can't scratch a you know what when compared with the Rads.
It will though give himthe same BTU as the copper. This guy really has
not
given enough info to help him. How many zones, what is on each zone.
When
measuring rads it is a pain in the butt, you need how many sections, the
width and length of each section, and the number of passes for each
section.
I can never figure it out I always call my Hydronic expert at my supply
house.

--
Bob Pietrangelo


www.comfort-solution.biz
On Time or Your Service Call is FREE
Preventive Maintenance Specialist




"Edwin Pawlowski" wrote in message
...

"Tom" wrote in message
...
We have an older house with a few hot water radiators in places we'd
rather put furniture. I'd like to replace a few of them with baseboard
heat. We have a single pipe system with each radiator fed off the

"main"
line and a circulation pump. The boiler runs about 170F.

This seems to me to be a relatively simple matter of properly sizing
the
baseboard and re-piping, but I'm always underestimating these things.

Can
anyone offer some advice? Is there a preference for cast-iron versus
fin-tube baseboard units? Is there a simple way to predict baseboard

size
from radiator size?

Thanks,
Tom


Thee is a web site from a plumbing supply house that has the information

you
need. I used it recently at work and do not have the information here.
A
google search may turn it up. You measure the radiator, count the

sections
and multiply for the answer. Simple to do.

Are you planning to keep some of the radiators? If so, you may have a
balance problem witht he heat. Cast iron retains a lot of heat once the
circulator turns off. Finned copper tubing does not. While one room is
still basking in the warmth of the CI the other rooms will be cooled down
more. You can buy CI baseboard. It would have roughly the same

properties
of heat retention as your present radiators.

There is information available he
http://www.burnham.com/radiator/58100.cfm I did not check it out, but

they
may have a conversion chart. http://www.burnham.com/lit/Baseray4-04.pdf

IMO, cast iron is the best heating system you can have. The only thing
better than cast iron water is cast iron steam.







  #15   Report Post  
m Ransley
 
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Default

Circulator pumps are not supposed to run 24x7 unless you want to waste
electricity. Will it work, you`ve gottten opinions, so try it and let us
know if you are happy.



  #16   Report Post  
Tom
 
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Default

My boiler installed highly recommended that the circulator be set up to run
24x7. I've tried it both ways, and there is definately an improvment in the
evenness of the heat throughout the house when the circulator is run all the
time. The electrictal cost is small.
r
"m Ransley" wrote in message
...
Circulator pumps are not supposed to run 24x7 unless you want to waste
electricity. Will it work, you`ve gottten opinions, so try it and let us
know if you are happy.



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