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Given the time of year, we thought it would be helpful to have some advice about your boiler from someone who knows what he’s talking about, Jon Cataneo of Gateway Plumbing.

Heating season is here. Many homeowners are thinking about upgrading or replacing their old heating boilers and don’t have a clue what to look for. Incentives are being offered to consider a conversion from fuel oil to natural gas and large rebates are available for efficiency upgrades. Here’s a quick primer that may help to sort through some of the products you’re likely to find in our area.

When it comes to boilers, you’ve got several choices.

Hot water boilers come in all ranges of efficiency these days from the standard 80% like these common makes and models:
• Burnham Series 2
• Weil-McLain CGa
• Peerless 63

All the way up to a very high 95% (and sometimes even higher):
• Triangle Tube Prestige
• Burnham Alpine
• Weil-McLain Ultra

In most cases, boilers starting in the mid-efficiency range of 84%-88%…

…require a special type of exhaust (flue) pipe and a dedicated air-intake to be brought in from outside and connected directly to the unit. Most often, the flues of these boilers must be vented either through a side wall or by extending the specialized exhaust pipe up through the chimney and rising out of the building’s roof. While this adds considerable cost to the installation, and renders your chimney unavailable to a standard water heater, The Code and boiler manufacturers tell us that these flue terminal points cannot be within a two-foot diameter of a building opening such as a door or window. So in an attached Brooklyn or Manhattan home, use of the side walls often presents a problem, be it for Landmarks Preservation, or a simple lack of free space.

Recently, one manufacturer has engineered a mid-efficiency 85% boiler, the Burnham ES2, which qualifies for high-efficiency rebates and uses standard chimney venting, but there’s a catch: If you’ve got a masonry chimney made of brick and mortar or stone, you’ve got to have it lined with a metal liner. Beginning about 10 years ago, heating engineers have been pushing for this upgrade across the board as masonry chimneys have received the brunt of blame for many ills where carbon monoxide safety is concerned. This probably stems from statistics revealing Europe, where high-efficiency boilers using engineered venting is the norm, having one CO incident to every five in the US for years.

Steam heating boilers have not and may never achieve the same high-efficiency ratings that hot water boilers have. For this reason, homes with steam boilers have far fewer options. Smaller rebates and incentives are available for steam-heating equipment exceeding 82% efficiency, which is met by boilers having both an automatic vent damper and electronic ignition system, so look for these features if you’re trying to qualify for a rebate. Just know they’re not for everyone.

For years there has been considerable debate over the cost of maintaining steam boilers with those sophisticated efficiency devices versus the expected savings possibly achieved by slightly reduced fuel use, but a smart heating contractor will explain the benefits and pitfalls of both systems to you. Electronic ignition systems inevitably fail with greater frequency than the standing pilot-light type and while the replacement parts not only cost plenty, they are typically only found at plumbing supply distributors as opposed to common hardware stores.

In addition, automatic vent dampers add considerable complexity to the otherwise simple wiring harness of a steam boiler, rendering troubleshooting breakdowns somewhat out of the skillset of many plumbing contractors.

Once a boiler is selected, a method of heating water for domestic use is the next thing to think about. Gas or oil fired, tank-type water heaters have proven themselves to be good enough over the years but efficiency was never their thing. Because they have a flue-pipe connected to the chimney, they are constantly loosing the heat they store (just as most standard boilers do) as air enters the bottom of the unit and rises through the tank and the chimney. This heat-robbing air flow is constant and nearly unavoidable in a residential unit.

A much better way to make hot water is to use your boiler to circulate heat through a radiator in a tank, called a heat exchanger, which warms the water you use in your sinks and showers. This is called an indirect water heater and the U.S. Department of Energy agrees it may be the least expensive means of providing hot water in the long term and are offering rebates of several hundred dollars if you have one installed in your home.

Perhaps most importantly when selecting a new or replacement boiler is to know that each piece of equipment has an installation manual listing that product’s particular tolerances. The installer must observe these requirements or you’ll be setting yourself up for a lifetime (the boiler’s) of headaches while efficiency and savings may never be realized. Not every boiler is suited to every home and product selection is sometimes a tedious process. Due diligence should be a professional’s job, but you should have some idea of what you’re getting for your money. After all, high-efficiency has never come cheaply.


What's Your Take? Leave a Comment

  1. Just as you don’t want to rush and buy a water heater without the proper knowledge, you don’t want to do electrical work on your home without the proper knowledge. I’ve heard too many stories about people doing electrical repairs themselves and compounding their problems. I leave these things to the professionals, that’s why I called http://www.electricianhouston.com when I needed work done.

  2. Interesting website. Maybe Master Plumber can help me, because I’m baffled. We have a Ruud quiet 80 forced air gas furnace here (spark ignition). Once or twice a season it will just quit for no apparent reason. I woke up today and the room temp was 3 degrees below the setting on my thermostat, I have to reset it to cycle it on. Then the exhaust fan starts for about 30 seconds, she sparks, the pilot lights, then goes out before the burner comes on full force. I cleaned the flame sensor and tried the rollout switches, nothing. Then in a few hours she just starts working again on her own. It seems like every time it happens, it fixes itself before a repairman comes, and my landlord cancels the call. He goes to Florida every winter leaving me wondering when it will happen again. I just want to know what it could be. Any idea? Thanks in advance…

  3. Hey MP,

    what does a beginning-of-heating-season cleaning/check-up on a hot water boiler for a 2-fam entail? And do you have a ballpark of what it would cost for Gateway to do it?

    Thanks!