I have a large 100 year old house which was originally heated with coal burning fireplace inserts, a coal stove in the kitchen and a large gravity flow open system (unpressurized) cast iron coal burning boiler in the basement with large cast iron radiators.
At some point in the past, the boiler was converted to oil burning by installing an oil burner. The mid-level doors were removed (loading doors?) and a plate with the oil burner was bolted on over the opening. The upper and lower level doors were sealed shut with what looks like high temperature silicone. The oil burner, based on flow rate, is running at a fuel consumption rate of about 150,000 BTU/h. The entire system (boiler, pipes and radiators) holds about 250 gallons of water (I measured when I flushed it out and refilled it).
The existing system takes about 3-4 hours to get all the radiators nice and hot to the touch if I let things cool down to about 50 degrees F (like when I go away for a weekend and turn down the thermostat). I find that setting the aquastat to 155 degrees F max works well if it is above freezing outside and 170 degrees F if it is below freezing outside. I have a good "smart" thermostat that takes outside temp into account and "learns" how long it takes the system to heat things up so I can set it to say what temp I want the house to be at what time and it figures out when to ask the boiler for heat to hit the temp I want at the time I want and also when to stop asking for heat so the house temp doesn't overshoot the target temp (the radiators don't "stop" heating until the water cools down to room temp). The boiler, radiators and 250 gallons of water have pretty huge thermal inertia.
Some electric baseboard heaters and forced air electric heaters were also installed in the colder parts of the house at some point in the past.
I have installed some pellet inserts into the larger fireplaces and a pellet stove in the kitchen for space heating in the most used and coldest parts of the house. I have also done a lot of insulating and air leak plugging (doors/windows etc)
At this point, I am using about 800 gallons of oil per year in the boiler. This is down from about 1600 gallons when I started insulating and putting in the pellet stoves (Oil is currently about $4.60 a gallon here) . My average electric consumption in the winter has also gone down from about 3500 kwh per month to about 2800 kwh/month ($0.125 per kwh). My summer consumption is about 2000 kwh/month. I am burning about 5 tons of pellets per year ($200/ton delivered).
So, right now I am using per heating season:
5600 kwh (over the summer baseline) = $700
800 gal of oil = $3680
5 tons pellets = $1000
Doing a rough cost per input btu calculation on oil vs pellets vs electric, figuring in the burner efficiency (but not the boiler efficiency which is probably low but I have no idea what it is) I get the following:
$1 of pellets = $2.72 of oil = $2.86 of electricity.
So, replacing the oil burner with a pellet burner like the Pellergy 3550 or the Woodmaster Renovator (maybe too small?) would mean getting rid of the $3680 spent on oil and adding only $1353 in pellets, so saving $2327 per year.
The price of pellets has been pretty stable here for the last few years and the price of heating oil has only gone up. When oil was $95 a barrel, heating oil was about $5.05 a gallon. Now, the price of oil is around $44 a barrel and heating oil is still $4.60 per gallon here. I am scared to see what would happen to the price of heating oil if oil went back up to $95 a barrel!! The electric company wants to increase the rate to $0.16 per kwh over the next 4 years.
I know that I can probably double the efficiency of my ancient boiler by replacing it with something new and efficient, but the cost to do so would be at least $10,000 more than just changing the burner because of all the other things I would then have to change (adding storage, heat exchanger, pumps, valves, piping, renovations to get the new boiler into the basement, etc) The most it could save me is under $700 a year in pellets, so not a great deal.
I know I will have to change the flue pipe to double wall and put a SS liner into the chimney.
Has anyone converted an old (>100 years old) coal boiler to pellets using one of these burners? Are there any problems with doing it? Are there any problems in my logic and/or math?
Sorry for such a long post!! Thanks for your time reading it and huge thanks for any helpful comments or advice!!
At some point in the past, the boiler was converted to oil burning by installing an oil burner. The mid-level doors were removed (loading doors?) and a plate with the oil burner was bolted on over the opening. The upper and lower level doors were sealed shut with what looks like high temperature silicone. The oil burner, based on flow rate, is running at a fuel consumption rate of about 150,000 BTU/h. The entire system (boiler, pipes and radiators) holds about 250 gallons of water (I measured when I flushed it out and refilled it).
The existing system takes about 3-4 hours to get all the radiators nice and hot to the touch if I let things cool down to about 50 degrees F (like when I go away for a weekend and turn down the thermostat). I find that setting the aquastat to 155 degrees F max works well if it is above freezing outside and 170 degrees F if it is below freezing outside. I have a good "smart" thermostat that takes outside temp into account and "learns" how long it takes the system to heat things up so I can set it to say what temp I want the house to be at what time and it figures out when to ask the boiler for heat to hit the temp I want at the time I want and also when to stop asking for heat so the house temp doesn't overshoot the target temp (the radiators don't "stop" heating until the water cools down to room temp). The boiler, radiators and 250 gallons of water have pretty huge thermal inertia.
Some electric baseboard heaters and forced air electric heaters were also installed in the colder parts of the house at some point in the past.
I have installed some pellet inserts into the larger fireplaces and a pellet stove in the kitchen for space heating in the most used and coldest parts of the house. I have also done a lot of insulating and air leak plugging (doors/windows etc)
At this point, I am using about 800 gallons of oil per year in the boiler. This is down from about 1600 gallons when I started insulating and putting in the pellet stoves (Oil is currently about $4.60 a gallon here) . My average electric consumption in the winter has also gone down from about 3500 kwh per month to about 2800 kwh/month ($0.125 per kwh). My summer consumption is about 2000 kwh/month. I am burning about 5 tons of pellets per year ($200/ton delivered).
So, right now I am using per heating season:
5600 kwh (over the summer baseline) = $700
800 gal of oil = $3680
5 tons pellets = $1000
Doing a rough cost per input btu calculation on oil vs pellets vs electric, figuring in the burner efficiency (but not the boiler efficiency which is probably low but I have no idea what it is) I get the following:
$1 of pellets = $2.72 of oil = $2.86 of electricity.
So, replacing the oil burner with a pellet burner like the Pellergy 3550 or the Woodmaster Renovator (maybe too small?) would mean getting rid of the $3680 spent on oil and adding only $1353 in pellets, so saving $2327 per year.
The price of pellets has been pretty stable here for the last few years and the price of heating oil has only gone up. When oil was $95 a barrel, heating oil was about $5.05 a gallon. Now, the price of oil is around $44 a barrel and heating oil is still $4.60 per gallon here. I am scared to see what would happen to the price of heating oil if oil went back up to $95 a barrel!! The electric company wants to increase the rate to $0.16 per kwh over the next 4 years.
I know that I can probably double the efficiency of my ancient boiler by replacing it with something new and efficient, but the cost to do so would be at least $10,000 more than just changing the burner because of all the other things I would then have to change (adding storage, heat exchanger, pumps, valves, piping, renovations to get the new boiler into the basement, etc) The most it could save me is under $700 a year in pellets, so not a great deal.
I know I will have to change the flue pipe to double wall and put a SS liner into the chimney.
Has anyone converted an old (>100 years old) coal boiler to pellets using one of these burners? Are there any problems with doing it? Are there any problems in my logic and/or math?
Sorry for such a long post!! Thanks for your time reading it and huge thanks for any helpful comments or advice!!