Hearthers,
Back to the drawing board. I think I've got the blunt of the system thought of but open to any input to make it mo bettah. My plumber is taking care of the gas boiler and I'll be adding the wood system via oversized heat exchanger. I plan on using Runtal panel heaters, slightly over sized to accommodate lower temp heating. I've got an 8x12 boiler room(footers currently being poured) behind garage that will hold two 500 gallon upright tanks with "open" maybe closed valve head tank. I'll have to see if I have enough head tank capacity to keep head tank valve closed with air gap. Tasso boiler will make the warm. Obviously a rough sketch and rough area/location of boiler. I've read up a bit on NFPA 211 for minimum clearances. Class A chimney for 2" clearance against wall. I'll run 24ga steel sheet with 1" air gap to make my minimum clearance to boiler sides and back at 12", if that's still code. Electric baseboard backup to keep room warm during vacation. Air handler located in boiler room vented to garage for heat only when boiler is online. See attached system drawing.
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FIRST:
You need to order a couple of books from AMAZON.
PUMPING AWAY by Dan Holohan
ClASSIC HYDRONICS by Dan Holohan
Then you need to fix your plumbing!!
You need two things. number one is a bypass loop on your
propane boiler. This is done to return a portion of this boilers
hot water volume back to the boiler sump to keep the boiler hotter.
You also need to do the same thing for your wood boiler.
this accomplish the same thing by saving heat in the wood boiler
and keeping the boiler water hotter at all times.
(You will not want to oversize your panel radiators as you will be pushing too much cooled water back to the boiler or boilers!! you only want a 20 degree temperature differential).
You can use a smaller plain steel radiators with a one pipe system where each plain steel radiator would also have its own manual thermostat BTW. Much less money spent too and you can buy beautiful radiator covers at a low cost per foot.
Number two is to install the "circulator" or "circulators" above the boilers "Pumping Away" from the boilers.
Doing this allows you to power purge the heating loops and push
all the air bubbles out using about three ounces of Dawn Dish Soap to break
up the air bubbles.
The other questions are:
How many stories is your home??
How big are your heating loops???
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A couple of other things:
Why do you have a valve on the expansion tank vent line ????? NOT GOOD!!
Your steel expansion tank is not going to work properly period
WHY do you not have the expansion tank line coming off the top of the wood boiler??????? I see no airtrol valve noted on the feed line to the tank(the airtrol is threaded directly into the base of the steel expansion tank.
You cannot get rid of trapped air the way you have it plumbed in the diagram, the vent line must come off the top of the wood boiler!!
Your storage tanks will not work the way you have them drawn as they will be bypassed. They need to be plumbed in series not series parallel.
IF you purchase the properly sized expansion tank and airtrol fitting you will be able to
use it for both systems and still have a closed system on the propane fired boiler side of your plumbing and if you have an air scoop and bladder tank you can eliminate that mess and the automatic air vents that fail over time and leak.
Do you have an airtrol valve in the steel expansion tank feed line that allows the air bubbles to enter the steel expansion and be trapped there?
The thing is that the steel expansion tank MUST have a 2/3 water to 1/3 air volume in order to work with the proper sized airtrol valve. unless your steel expansion tank is vented to air (PROPERLY) it must be a sealed system in order to maintain a minimum of 12 PSI in the system.
Using that size tank will require the larger B+G Airtrol valve and manual air vent tubing to properly balance the system.
In order to use the steel expansion tank properly you need an ASME tank and it must be sized properly for the systems total water volume.
You also need to have a tank gauge installed in the side of the expansion to monitor the water level in the steel expansion tank.
If you intend on using a plain steel expansion tank of this size you must plan on having
120 gallons of water in the tank to have the proper 2/3 water 1/3 air ratio to absorb any air bubbles. You will need a closed system to do this properly with the plain steel expansion tank. BTW a diaphram tank will cost you much more money and a steel expansion tank hung in the ceiling has no moving parts and allows you enjoy not having to bleed air as long as its piped properly.
I would like to ask which brand of wood boiler you own? If you fill your wood boiler half full of fire brick like I did it creates a huge amount of thermal mass keeping the fire hotter and the water hotter at all times.
Please order these two books before you do anything
Your system needs to be properly plumbed and the storage tanks connected properly to the system as the series parallel plumbing diagram you have is not going to help you one bit as the the system will not work.
I only want you to succeed my friend,