Totally off the subject

   / Totally off the subject #1  

llewellynsd

Member
Joined
Mar 27, 2002
Messages
48
Location
Western Maryland
Tractor
Sath S-370
In reference to the carry all post by "beenthere" it was mention that the wood stove was connected into another furnace.
Here is my question I have a Jensen coal/wood stove in my basement. It sits along side my Burnham oil hot water boiler. I would like to know if there is a site on the net that someone knows about that could help me figure out how to run the water out of my boiler into my wood stove? Also if possible it has been recommneded that I run my domestic water from my electric hot water tank into the boiler so that my wood stove would be doing triple duty - heating the basement from the blower on the wood stove, heating the upstairs baseboard and also heating the water coming out of the spickets.
Sorry to get off the tractor topic but you all have such a vast amount of knowledge that I can't help but to ask.

Thanks Shawn.
 
   / Totally off the subject #2  
I've got a wood fired hot water furnace outside that does all that u wantand heats the floor in the attached garage(80 degrees right now) and heats the 40x60 shop.
U would have to build some sort of heat exchanger to go
into the wood stove and heat the return water from
baseboards.
U would want SS I would assume to keep corrosion down.
 
   / Totally off the subject #3  
A couple things I'd watch out for are:

Being able to keep the domestic HW temp below 140°F to avoid the "scorch me, I'm a lobster" syndrome.

Making sure to keep the heating devices flooded. Introducing water into a hot dry stove jacket would be exciting. If I recall, water flashing to steam instantly increases the 1 cubic foot of water to 1,700 cubic feet of steam.

You don't want to mix water from heating piping with potable water.

Pressure requirements for the heating system should be way less than your domestic.

I think the first answer recommending an exchanger is on track. You could set up controls to stop heating the domestic water at a predetermined level, and keep the water of the different systems separate. Sure sounds interesting..............chim
 
 
 
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