Harman pb105 Temperature question

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Chris04626

Minister of Fire
Ok i have my thermostat set at 62 it is 72 in the house and every so often we can feel heat coming from the baseboards. Just started doing this today, the previous 4 days it never did it and we hardly used any pellets, today though we have gone through atleast 1 bag

Does something else telling the boiler to produce heat, besides the thermostat? OR why would it be doing this?
 
Ok i have my thermostat set at 62 it is 72 in the house and every so often we can feel heat coming from the baseboards. Just started doing this today, the previous 4 days it never did it and we hardly used any pellets, today though we have gone through atleast 1 bag

Does something else telling the boiler to produce heat, besides the thermostat? OR why would it be doing this?


What is the water temp in the boiler doing? sounds like the boiler is staying hot for some reason and you are getting some gravity flow through the BB.
 
Maybe there is an overheat protection that is kicking in and is sending hot water trough the baseboard to cool down the PB105.

Does this pellet boiler model shuts off and ignites automatically or is it always burning some small amount of pellets?
 
Does the boiler operate/fire up only on a call for heat from a thermostat or does it simply maintain temp based on its own control?
I would assume the harmon can be set up either way.

If its hot all the time, you probably have some " gravity" flow going on that is moving heat around regardless of whether you have a pump running or not.

If as Marc suggests, there is an overheat circuit piped into the boiler/baseboard that could be the case also. The water temp is getting too high and that circuit is allowing heat to bleed off.
 
Well the thermostat has been set to 62 and it has been firing up even when its 70 degrees in the house, so im not totally sure. I know the first few days it, didnt do it, and used hardly any pellets. But yesterday it started doing it and is using alot more pellets. a bag or 2 since yesterday when the previous days didnt even burn 1 bag

The Plumemr said he set it up so it will maintain itself whatever that means
 
OK. If the boiler is staying hot, which is what the plumber means when he says "maintain itself", you are probably getting some unwanted flow through the baseboard registers due to temperature difference in the pipes.

Do you have one circulator with multiple zone valves on the piping in the basement? Or, just a single thermostat that turns on the circulator?
 
I just went down and looked and it was buri\ning but no heat was coming from baseboard, i checked the temperature guage on the boiler and it was just over 140, which that is the minimum temp you can set it as, so i guess the water got below 140 so it turned on, but not sure why it soemtimes causes heat to come from baseboards.

Or why it didnt do it the first few days
 
I have a singular thermostat upstairs that he says will run the pellet boiler and if the pellets run out or the pellet boiler turns off for some reason the oil boiler will automatically kick on and maintain set temperature.
 
Or why it didnt do it the first few days

Could be a number of reasons for that. But first if you could, tell me about the zone valves/pump configuration in your basement. That will give me some clues.
How many thermostats are there in your house?
 
I only have heating on my main level of the house, the 2nd story does not have heat ran to it, i will add that eventually though, and the basement is not heated


So....One thermostat and one pump on the old boiler?

A picture would be worth a thousand........ :)
 
Flash worked good
 

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i have my thermostat set at 60 its 70 in the house and every once in awhile you can feel heat coming from baseboards and of course gets hot in here, and im burning a bag or little more a day.
The first few days of having it installed it didnt have heat coming through the baseboard at all, and only heated the hot water and a bag lasted a couple days
 
The first thing you need to figure out is why this pellet boiler is firing up when there is no heat call from your zone(s).
Is it possible that this pellet boiler is always on, even when there is no heat call? If not, something must trigger it to ignite.
If it is always on then I still think it's the overheat protection that kicks in. Where is that aquastat on the top of the boiler leading too?
Always on would be a disaster for pellet consumption.
Did you install this yourself?
Check page 21 and 25 in the manual.
 
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How many feed of baseboard do you have in total in this one zone setup?

How big is the house in SF?

This is a fairly potent pellet boiler.
I don't think you will be able to run this efficiently without sufficient heat demand and or thermal water storage of course.
 
No a plumber and heating guy installed it,

House is about 2000 square feet, i have 5 sections of baseboard

5 sections as in 5 x 8' = 40 Feet?
 

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Hi Chris,

I would suggest you get your plumber and heating guy back in.

In my opinion this pellet boiler is way to big for your situation: i.e. at least 50%
I don't think it will ever perform very efficiently unless you put a good amount of water storage in
Just my 2 cents.
 
some of my baseboard runs are atleast 12 feet. The house is 2 story plus basement, There is only heat ran to the first floor, eventually we will have a zone ran into the upstairs., maybe even a portion of the basement that we are working on finishing.

Our regular oil boiler doesn't heat the house well in the winter time. Both the dealer and the plumber said this boiler would work for us no problem .

Like i said the first couple days it ran perfect, heated our hot water when we needed it for showers and dishes, and did not push heat into baseboards and used hardly any pellets, ever since then though we have been using a bag or more a day and it sometimes pushes heat to the baseboards.

I am wondering if it just gets to hot it needs a place to dump the water therefore heats the baseboards? Does it need a bigger expansion tank? Bu tthen again why the big increase in pellets burned?

It seems the temp guage on the boiler is pretty quick at falling below the 140 minimum which then the boiler has to kick back on.
 
Tough to see what exactly the piping configuration is from the pictures.

What operates the zone valve? Is it connected to your oil boiler or the pellet boiler?
 
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