I'd recommend forgetting about the heat pump water heater. It does not sound like a good application at all. They have a fairly narrow "band" of optimal operating conditions and your situation does not appear to meet those.
For a single resident or small family situation it's hard to beat the low up front investment of a good electric water heater. You should be able to get one installed for $500-$700. (of course you are on the Cape so who knows.....) The water heater itself will be in the $300 range at a Lowe's, Home Despot or hardware store.
Then if you are heating solely with pellets you can turn off your boiler.
I do suspect however that given the 3 tanks of oil consumption, the boiler is providing some heat to the house along with the hot water production.
If you do the math on 700 gallons of oil, that works out to about 265,000 btu's per day/annually. It is nearly impossible to comprehend that your domestic hot water use would demand that much heat. For that reason I am questioning whether the boiler may also be providing some heat to the house.
For a single resident or small family situation it's hard to beat the low up front investment of a good electric water heater. You should be able to get one installed for $500-$700. (of course you are on the Cape so who knows.....) The water heater itself will be in the $300 range at a Lowe's, Home Despot or hardware store.
Then if you are heating solely with pellets you can turn off your boiler.
I do suspect however that given the 3 tanks of oil consumption, the boiler is providing some heat to the house along with the hot water production.
If you do the math on 700 gallons of oil, that works out to about 265,000 btu's per day/annually. It is nearly impossible to comprehend that your domestic hot water use would demand that much heat. For that reason I am questioning whether the boiler may also be providing some heat to the house.
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