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UK diy (uk.d-i-y) For the discussion of all topics related to diy (do-it-yourself) in the UK. All levels of experience and proficency are welcome to join in to ask questions or offer solutions. |
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#1
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
Howdy all
We have a back boiler installed behind our (60s) fireplace. However our hot water comes from the gas CH system, which heats the water just once a day for a couple of hours. We hardly ever use the fire except in the depths of winter. (We _do_ enjoy it immensely, so we wouldn't consider _not_ having any fire at all.) I always used to think: back-boiler: bonus! Free hot water! However recently a different thought occurred to me: if the CH is providing a cistern full of hot water... but the back boiler system is full of cold water ... is it not going to slowly circulate the hot water down, by gravity, through the back boiler, then back up to the hot water cistern ... and slowly cool that expensive hot water? I've a mind to take out the back boiler, in the hopes that our hot water supply will stay hotter longer. (BTW there's only two of us in the house now, and we don't have baths (we have showers instead!).) I've been thinking about a wood stove for many a year, so now may be a good time to do it. Yes, I am aware you can get stoves with back boilers, but for the reason described above, I wouldn't fancy one. Can anyone dispel my ignorance in this area? Cheers John |
#2
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
Another John wrote:
Howdy all We have a back boiler installed behind our (60s) fireplace. However our hot water comes from the gas CH system, which heats the water just once a day for a couple of hours. We hardly ever use the fire except in the depths of winter. (We _do_ enjoy it immensely, so we wouldn't consider _not_ having any fire at all.) I always used to think: back-boiler: bonus! Free hot water! However recently a different thought occurred to me: if the CH is providing a cistern full of hot water... but the back boiler system is full of cold water ... is it not going to slowly circulate the hot water down, by gravity, through the back boiler, then back up to the hot water cistern ... and slowly cool that expensive hot water? I've a mind to take out the back boiler, in the hopes that our hot water supply will stay hotter longer. (BTW there's only two of us in the house now, and we don't have baths (we have showers instead!).) I've been thinking about a wood stove for many a year, so now may be a good time to do it. Yes, I am aware you can get stoves with back boilers, but for the reason described above, I wouldn't fancy one. Can anyone dispel my ignorance in this area? Heat has a tendency to rise, so it's unlikely that hot water will 'fall' down the pipes into the cold back boiler -- Phil L RSRL Tipster Of The Year 2008 |
#3
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On 04/10/2010 22:06, Another John wrote:
Howdy all We have a back boiler installed behind our (60s) fireplace. However our hot water comes from the gas CH system, which heats the water just once a day for a couple of hours. We hardly ever use the fire except in the depths of winter. (We _do_ enjoy it immensely, so we wouldn't consider _not_ having any fire at all.) I always used to think: back-boiler: bonus! Free hot water! However recently a different thought occurred to me: if the CH is providing a cistern full of hot water... but the back boiler system is full of cold water ... is it not going to slowly circulate the hot water down, by gravity, through the back boiler, then back up to the hot water cistern ... and slowly cool that expensive hot water? I've a mind to take out the back boiler, in the hopes that our hot water supply will stay hotter longer. (BTW there's only two of us in the house now, and we don't have baths (we have showers instead!).) I've been thinking about a wood stove for many a year, so now may be a good time to do it. Yes, I am aware you can get stoves with back boilers, but for the reason described above, I wouldn't fancy one. Can anyone dispel my ignorance in this area? Hot water always rises. It goes against the laws of physics to fall. IHTH Dave |
#4
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On Mon, 4 Oct 2010 22:12:08 +0100, Phil L wrote:
Heat has a tendency to rise, so it's unlikely that hot water will 'fall' down the pipes into the cold back boiler Heat moves from hot places to colder places in any direction. Hot objects expand, thus they become less dense than colder parts of the same object. If the object can flow like in a fluid or a gas the hotter, (less dense) will be pushed up an away by coldler (denser) flowing in underneath. So the hot water in the cylinder above the colder water in the back bolier is going to stay up in the cylinder. Well the heated water in the primary coil rather than the cylinder contents. It might be worth checking how the gas boiler is plumbed into this system. It might be that the flow (gravity or pumped) through the gas boiler also introduces an unwanted and wasteful flow through the back boiler. -- Cheers Dave. |
#5
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
Hi
You say the house is a 60's build IIR the backboilers in these houses was (as you say) behind a coal fire with a flue diverter in the chimney to suck heat around it when the fire was lit. This type of system was a direct system with the same water in the hot cylinder being routed through the back boiler .(memories of dad yelling Turn on the Bl*&^y hot water quick before the bedroom fills with steam). When central heating was fitted one way to heat the existing tank was to remove the immersion heater and replace it with a heat exchanger coil which the new gas boiler heated. Another was to replace the existing cylinder with an indirect unit and disconnect the back boiler totally leaving the boiler behind the fire empty. It may be worth checking your cylinder to verify the system. HTH CJ. |
#6
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On 4 Oct, 22:06, Another John wrote:
Howdy all We have a back boiler installed behind our (60s) fireplace. *However our hot water comes from the gas CH system, which heats the water just once a day for a couple of hours. We hardly ever use the fire except in the depths of winter. (We _do_ enjoy it immensely, so we wouldn't consider _not_ having any fire at all.) I always used to think: back-boiler: bonus! * Free hot water! However recently a different thought occurred to me: * if the CH is providing a cistern full of hot water... but the back boiler system is full of cold water ... is it not going to slowly circulate the hot water down, by gravity, through the back boiler, then back up to the hot water cistern ... and slowly cool that expensive hot water? I've a mind to take out the back boiler, in the hopes that our hot water supply will stay hotter longer. *(BTW there's only two of us in the house now, and we don't have baths (we have showers instead!).) I've been thinking about a wood stove for many a year, so now may be a good time to do it. *Yes, I am aware you can get stoves with back boilers, but for the reason described above, I wouldn't fancy one. Can anyone dispel my ignorance in this area? Cheers John Our wood burning stove with a back boiler has its own valves and pump and only pumps water when the thermostat attached to its pipes indicates it's hot enough. I have the thermostat set at 45C and it certainly warms the radiators. Jonathan |
#7
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On Tue, 5 Oct 2010 00:21:19 -0700 (PDT), Jonathan wrote:
Our wood burning stove with a back boiler has its own valves and pump and only pumps water when the thermostat attached to its pipes indicates it's hot enough. I have the thermostat set at 45C and it certainly warms the radiators. And what happens when you have a good fire burning and you get a power cut? Just when you need the heat from the wood burner you have to put it out to stop the boiler boiling or possibly exploding. The circuit from a wood burner or other stove should be gravity and have a passive heat dump for when the cylinder has reached 90C... -- Cheers Dave. |
#8
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On 5 Oct, 01:26, "cj" wrote:
Hi You say the house is a 60's build IIR the backboilers in these houses was (as you say) behind a coal fire with a flue diverter in the chimney to suck heat around it when the fire was lit. This type of system was a direct system with the same water in the hot cylinder being routed through the back boiler .(memories of dad yelling Turn on the Bl*&^y hot water quick before the bedroom fills with steam). When central heating was fitted one way to heat the existing tank was to remove the immersion heater and replace it with a heat exchanger coil which the new gas boiler heated. Another was to replace the existing cylinder with an indirect unit and disconnect the back boiler totally leaving the boiler behind the fire empty. It may be worth checking your cylinder to verify the system. HTH CJ. The above has a point. However I think if it had been disconnected you would have become aware of it. (a) Your water in the cylinder wouldn't get hot when you lit a fire. (b) The firebacke boilers had no drain point you would have heard the rumble of boilng water in the boiler after a while when you lit a fire if it had been disconnected. After a few hours the boiler would have melted /burned through/ sagged./ when it boiled dry. There used to be an alternative way of dealing with the cyinder's lack of heat exchanger. That was to install a " sidewinder" heat exchanger, a dodgy device with mechanical joints. Bloody hell, they still make them! http://www.trademate.co.uk/ProductEx.../yorkshire.pdf page nine. These were very popular back in the sixties/seventies. They worked quite well but sometimes leaked. |
#9
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On 5 Oct, 09:33, "Dave Liquorice"
wrote: On Tue, 5 Oct 2010 00:21:19 -0700 (PDT), Jonathan wrote: Our wood burning stove with a back boiler has its own valves and pump and only pumps water when the thermostat attached to its pipes indicates it's hot enough. I have the thermostat set at 45C and it certainly warms the radiators. And what happens when you have a good fire burning and you get a power cut? Just when you need the heat from the wood burner you have to put it out to stop the boiler boiling or possibly exploding. The circuit from a wood burner or other stove should be gravity and have a passive heat dump for when the cylinder has reached 90C... -- Cheers Dave. No, two radiators are permanently attached on a separate loop, gravity fed to dissipate any excess heat and are sized for that purpose. Jonathan |
#10
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On 5 Oct, 09:33, "Dave Liquorice"
wrote: On Tue, 5 Oct 2010 00:21:19 -0700 (PDT), Jonathan wrote: Our wood burning stove with a back boiler has its own valves and pump and only pumps water when the thermostat attached to its pipes indicates it's hot enough. I have the thermostat set at 45C and it certainly warms the radiators. And what happens when you have a good fire burning and you get a power cut? Just when you need the heat from the wood burner you have to put it out to stop the boiler boiling or possibly exploding. The circuit from a wood burner or other stove should be gravity and have a passive heat dump for when the cylinder has reached 90C... -- Cheers Dave. It is in fact illegit to have it any other way. All solid fuel fired heating systems have to ave a convection heat sink. Usually the DHW cylinder but sometimes a radiator. |
#11
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
Dave wrote:
On 04/10/2010 22:06, Another John wrote: Howdy all We have a back boiler installed behind our (60s) fireplace. However our hot water comes from the gas CH system, which heats the water just once a day for a couple of hours. We hardly ever use the fire except in the depths of winter. (We _do_ enjoy it immensely, so we wouldn't consider _not_ having any fire at all.) I always used to think: back-boiler: bonus! Free hot water! However recently a different thought occurred to me: if the CH is providing a cistern full of hot water... but the back boiler system is full of cold water ... is it not going to slowly circulate the hot water down, by gravity, through the back boiler, then back up to the hot water cistern ... and slowly cool that expensive hot water? I've a mind to take out the back boiler, in the hopes that our hot water supply will stay hotter longer. (BTW there's only two of us in the house now, and we don't have baths (we have showers instead!).) I've been thinking about a wood stove for many a year, so now may be a good time to do it. Yes, I am aware you can get stoves with back boilers, but for the reason described above, I wouldn't fancy one. Can anyone dispel my ignorance in this area? Hot water always rises. It goes against the laws of physics to fall. How come I don't get a wet ceiling when I turn on the hot tap then? :-) |
#12
Posted to uk.d-i-y
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
Another John wrote:
Howdy all We have a back boiler installed behind our (60s) fireplace. However our hot water comes from the gas CH system, which heats the water just once a day for a couple of hours. We hardly ever use the fire except in the depths of winter. (We _do_ enjoy it immensely, so we wouldn't consider _not_ having any fire at all.) I always used to think: back-boiler: bonus! Free hot water! However recently a different thought occurred to me: if the CH is providing a cistern full of hot water... but the back boiler system is full of cold water ... is it not going to slowly circulate the hot water down, by gravity, through the back boiler, then back up to the hot water cistern ... and slowly cool that expensive hot water? I've a mind to take out the back boiler, in the hopes that our hot water supply will stay hotter longer. (BTW there's only two of us in the house now, and we don't have baths (we have showers instead!).) I've been thinking about a wood stove for many a year, so now may be a good time to do it. Yes, I am aware you can get stoves with back boilers, but for the reason described above, I wouldn't fancy one. Can anyone dispel my ignorance in this area? disconnect back boiler and fill with sand. Hot water from a back boiler is such an insignificant factor its not worth it unless you have a 24x7 fire like an Aga. Cheers John |
#13
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On Oct 5, 11:48*am, The Natural Philosopher
wrote: disconnect back boiler and fill with sand. Seal the piping too, because otherwise that can "plumb" CO to undesired locations. Hot water from a back boiler is such an insignificant factor its not worth it unless you have a 24x7 fire like an Aga. Back boiler piping sat in cold chimneys can burst during extremely cold weather, one contributory reason for their demise when combined with expensive wooden floors. |
#14
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On 5 Oct, 14:56, "js.b1" wrote:
On Oct 5, 11:48*am, The Natural Philosopher wrote: disconnect back boiler and fill with sand. Seal the piping too, because otherwise that can "plumb" CO to undesired locations. Hot water from a back boiler is such an insignificant factor its not worth it unless you have a 24x7 fire like an Aga. Back boiler piping sat in cold chimneys can burst during extremely cold weather, one contributory reason for their demise when combined with expensive wooden floors. Definitely don't seal the pipes. If there's any water remaining in the boiler it could explode if sealed and heated. Not possible to get access to fill with sand. |
#15
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Back boiler: friend or foe?
On 05/10/2010 10:24, Scion wrote:
Dave wrote: Hot water always rises. It goes against the laws of physics to fall. How come I don't get a wet ceiling when I turn on the hot tap then? :-) It's a bit like letting the smoke out of electric motor. You turn on the tap and the hot water has to fall out of a hole, just like the smoke does from the motor. Dave |
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