I
imacman
Guest
I will be installing it tomorrow, and testing it out. I'll let the forum the results after I get some time to test it out.
macman said:Installed the ThermGuard today, and it worked exactly as advertised. I set the unit to cycle the burner on every 3 hours for a 6 minutes. It's nice that it has an on-off switch too. I don't need the burner to come on now, so I turned it off, and when the weather gets a lot colder (near 32), I can just flip the switch and I'm protected...Yippee!
Now I can also set the thermostat for those rooms lower than what I had in the past (55), and save some $$ on that expensive oil I had to buy at $4.19/gal in August.....between the pellet stove and the ThermGuard, I wonder how long I can go before I have to put any oil in the tank? (it's a 550 Gal, filled in middle of August and now just is used to heat a Bock indirect h2o water heater).
Thanks to John from Bear Mtn for the technical advice.
I would be more interested in only circulating the water, not running the actual burner. That way the moving water wouldn’t be able to feeze. Plus it would be moving thru the heated space which would warm it slightly too. Anyone know how to do that? Would need to run the circulating pump without running the furnace.
kast said:Stupid question, if you have two zones and ran the second zone twice a day for your upstairs bedrooms, you still should look out for freezing pipes because of no use in zone 1?
davevassar said:So my stove is on the main floor, and my basement get's pretty cool during the cold nights. if I turn on the fan for the forced hot air, wouldn't the air it would be blowing out be cool, or is it offset by circulating the heat in the house from the stove.
orangecrushcj7 said:I would be more interested in only circulating the water, not running the actual burner. That way the moving water wouldn't be able to feeze. Plus it would be moving thru the heated space which would warm it slightly too. Anyone know how to do that? Would need to run the circulating pump without running the furnace.
Mike J said:Do you have to install the unit under your thermostat? Can it be installed in the basement? It seems that it needs to be wired in parallel with the thermostat contacts (r and w?). If it is that simple, I would think you could cut it into the thermostat cable anywhere. I don't think my wife would want me to have the box hanging under the thermostat, but if it has to be that way, it is better than having frozen pipes.
bridgerman said:kast said:Stupid question, if you have two zones and ran the second zone twice a day for your upstairs bedrooms, you still should look out for freezing pipes because of no use in zone 1?
Hi Kast,
You should worry about freezing in any zone that doesn't run. Especially if the heating pipes run close to an outside wall or unheated basement or attic. My problem in my home was that the main floor pipes froze when I ran my wood stove. The thermostat thought it was 70 degrees in the house so it never called for heat. My lower zone froze where it ran over an unheated garage.
I hope that helped!
Cheers,
John
Hiskid said:ThermGuard: $63.00
Relay : $7.00 http://search.digikey.com/scripts/DkSearch/dksus.dll?Detail?name=Z184-ND
24VAC transformer: $6.29 http://www.radioshack.com/product/index.jsp?productId=2102701&cp;=&kw=transformer&parentPage=search
Wire: ?? whatever you've got.
Cheers,
John
kast said:The house I just bought in May 08 heating system (oil-to forced hot water) is about 10 years old (house in close to 100) and I noticed it’s just an on/off no fan. what I was wondering is it the system you buy that determines whether it has a fan or is it the person installing not wanting to do extra work to add that. In addition, are all-newer system equipped for that feature, and what does it entail to add something like that? Better yet where does a fan actually hook-up, to the baseboards? Sorry to slam you with all the question
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