Researching all this stuff forces you to become a more educated consumer too, even if you don't end up diy'ing everything, it makes it easier to know when a contractor is feeding you a line of bull. And that's always a good thing!
Oh okThe water coil won't make enough heat to feed a radiant floor...plus it steals a bit of heat from making hot air...but making the crawlspace into conditioned space may not be a bad idea...
No theres ducts that go through unheated spaces but they are insulated. I never try to heat the garage it's hard to heat the house let alone the garage too. It never gets below freezing in the garage anyway good enough for the car if you ask me. When I do use it there's a little electric blower that makes it so you can do the work on the car without gloves or a hat. I do know that the addition requires the most heat. From experience it takes double what the main house requires in the duct. As in a 4in opening in the duct work heats the run that goes to the main house. A 8in to the addition to heat it to the same temp. That's how it was ran with the clayton at least. The VF100 mixes better and they are both wide opened now. The damper in the duct work was added when the clayton was over heating the main house and under heating the addition.Just a wild hail Mary pass here...there isn't a duct that is blowing into an "unheated" space, like the garage, attic, crawlspace, anything like that, is there?
One thing I did to add a bit of efficiency to the basement windows in the finished part of the basement was to install a piece of plexiglass in the window well...I just cut a piece of plexi that was about 3/8" smaller than the ID of the finished window well (want it to fit kinda snug) wrapped it with foam pipe wrap around the edge and shoved it back into the opening a bit. Seems like it helped some...floor doesn't feel as cold, and don't notice the slight draft in the area when it its windy out now...and there was double pane windows there before too...but I'm not sure how well they are installed, as far as the air sealing...I bet... Nah I know that window leaks lol
I'm willing to try anything at this point so all ideas are good ideasAs my boss likes to say...just thinking out loud here, so hear me out. And I know that there are a few different well versed boiler guys reading this, feel free to jump in then guys.
I've never tried it, so I may be all wet here, but I wonder what would happen if you ran a duct from the supply plenum to the blower intake to try to keep the return air temp up...kinda like the mixing valve, or return protection valve (correct name?) that the boiler guys use to keep the water coming back to the boiler from being too cold. Does that make any sense at all? Hmm...
If coal weren't so hard on most liners I would even suggest a small coal stove to supplement.I’m no furnace person but a max rated net output of 47kbtu/hr based the heat loss of the house during mild weather, and not keeping up is obviously depressing.
In my house foaming the rim joists and r10 panels on the basement walls made a large difference. I’d bet tightening the house might get you there but will take some time if your doing this yourself.
Just a wild thought, you mentioned a stove to get you through while you are insulating but the cost of the flue being prohibitive. Also the wood stove would provide uneven heat output not being consistent enough to determine what your actual deficit is while running the kuma to get you over the hump.
Could you buy a pellet stove/ direct vent out of a basement window for now, being a metered fuel and able to control the output as you make improvements. Hopefully as you insulate you could keep reducing its output, seeing at what point if possible you wouldn’t need it anymore, then Craigslist it? It would allow you to have a warm house while you work on the improvements, buy some breathing room?
I was thinking about something like this myself, but it sounds like a turbocharger blowing exhaust from the turbine into the compressor, which of course won't work.As my boss likes to say...just thinking out loud here, so hear me out. And I know that there are a few different well versed boiler guys reading this, feel free to jump in then guys.
I've never tried it, so I may be all wet here, but I wonder what would happen if you ran a duct from the supply plenum to the blower intake to try to keep the return air temp up...kinda like the mixing valve, or return protection valve (correct name?) that the boiler guys use to keep the water coming back to the boiler from being too cold. Does that make any sense at all? Hmm...
www.hearth.com
I still don't know if the bottom half of my house has insulation or not... considering they did not bother sealing any rim joists I highly doubt it. Im waiting for a cold night to check inside with the IR... Pulling return air from up high seems like it helped it was almost 75 in the house today when the temp hit 40Interesting...
Foundation heat loss and insulation.
Been insulating and air sealing using my smarthphone FLIR to easily find all areas of heat loss. This flir shot of my foundation wall outside shows how much heat loss uninsulated exposed concrete foundations have. It was quite staggering and all that orange/white is some serious heat flowing...www.hearth.com
yes I just tired it... all looks the same so no it wont work... either way I'm starting the rim joist tomorrow I got 2 inch foam board. I might put some fiberglass in after too just for extra I got lots of it just siting in my garage anyway.Anyways...looking at an IR pic from the inside I think will look similar, no matter if there is insulation on the outside or not...or at least will not show anything conclusive.
yes no returns and the stair well is in the middle... none of the basement is insulated though. That includes the finished part. What you see is just drywall nothing is behind it.So you said you have no return ducts, correct?
After studying your pics, it looks like the air has to come through the unfinished part of the basement before it gets to the room where the furnace is? (comes from the left when you are loading the furnace?)
If this is correct, I bet its the unfinished part of the basement that is really sucking up the heat...and I'm wondering if there is a way that you could return directly into the "furnace room"? Floor vent cut into the ceiling? (with damper door and fusible link to meet fire code) Or a short return duct run from multiple return vents from above the furnace room? Or from the other way, to the right? Just throwing out ideas here...
My sister has a long ranch style and the wood furnace supply vents are at one end (close to the furnace) and then the basement stairwell is open at the other end of the house...it works pretty well to heat the whole house...at least until it gets real cold, then they fire up the fireplace insert stove in the family room too (which is the last room, and just beyond that open basement stairwell)
View attachment 254213
This is directly above the VF100.... It also has the open stairwell to get air back from... None of this is my work by the way... I bought the house like this.
I'm not a furnace guy - but that has to be one of the oddest looking register setups I've ever seen. Got me wondering what else you have going on there that has you behind lots of 8 balls...
I was going to get one and everyone told me not too... I missed the rebate on the stove now so now it would be like 6500![]()
I always have the two returns there I just keep closedSurely not going to spread the heat around very well...looks to me like using the stairwell as the return is the better plan...
It's 68 in the house today so it's kind of keeping up today I guess. I got 4 more degrees at the register today with the cardboard.

We use essential cookies to make this site work, and optional cookies to enhance your experience.