

I installed two 5-day programmable thermostats late in the winter, so the hour counters and the scheduling should help tune our heating habits and or identify floors that should have their insulation reviewed/addressed first. I’ll be adding hour counters to both circulation pumps so I can see which floors are demanding more heat. The boiler is a late 90’s oil burning unit. I’m going to be bringing in the local boiler guy to completely strip, clean and replace anything that can or should be replaced. The boiler has not seen any maintenance in at least 4 years (no filter change, cleaning, anything).
Proselect force boiler reviews windows#
There was 1/8” to ¼” gaps around all these new windows with only some nailed in trim keeping the weather out. To reach this extreme goal, I’ve been insulating the new windows and doors the previous owner had installed, but failed to insulate around them.
Proselect force boiler reviews full#
This was totally brutal, and did add some financial strain as we weren’t expecting it to be that bad (previous owner was full of crap when they said average was $600 a month). My goal this year is the cut the heating bill down to 45% of what it was last year (~$1000 a month worth of oil). If all of what I have heard about this type of heat is true, I'm probably going to make the big jump in the next 1-2 years. Still can't wrap my head around it as my ground water is 45'F in the summer. I was told that this geothermal system can be tied into a boiler system nicely. Is anyone running, or have setup a Geothermal system with their hot water boiler? Sears was awful, the salesman knew nothing, didn't want to FAX in advance the "paperwork" I would have to sign and had no brochures to leave with me or any description of anything. The final quote, which I got from Sears, of all places, is for about $2.5k more for a Kenmore which I was told was really a Ducane. The Williamson, I am told, is about $500 less.Īnother quote I have, which is about $1k more, is for a Burnham. The brochures I have for the Williamson/Weil-McLain shows boilers that look like duplicates of each other, both using Beckett burners. So perhaps there isn't much to calculate (or at least to make note of in my presence). at most with force hot water baseboards around the 22x44 ft perimenter. a three bedroom, one bath 1960's stamp-it-on-the-ground ranch on Cape Cod with two zones, one to heat the residential floor (basement is unheated) and one to heat an indirect domestic hot water tank. However, the application seems rediculously simple. First, the various plumbers whose quotes I have specified a three section boiler without any obvious calculations.
