Lar-Bud said:
The "Exsisting Furnace" is the natural gas forced air furnace that is currently in our basement. It heats the house and basement. In the garage to the right of the entry door is where I have a small natural gas heater that heats the garage. That's what the gas vent or chimney pipe is for. I want to put our wood boiler in it's place. But just this morning I ran into a snag. The HVAC guy talked to the state inspector today. The inspector, when told the boiler was from CozyHeat, said absolutely not because they are not ASME certified nor are they UL listed. He said that there are a lot of people in Michigan that will have to pull them out. My question; Now what? Are there any wood gasification boilers out there that are ASME certified and UL listed? I don't know what to do now.
I've been through this in MA, as we have the same kind of STUPIDITY in our state. First off, ASME and UL are two different certifications, though they kind of overlap a bit. The ASME Cert requirements were not written for solid fuel boilers, but are being used on them anyway, and impose a huge amount of added expense and headaches for manufacturers and consumers without adding ANY meaningful benefit to consumer safety. If you do a search on ASME certification you will find a few threads where I've gone into this in the past. I've also posted a copy of a paper that BioHeat sponsored back when they were fighting this battle in MA, and lost (because we have a bunch of ASME hacks and employees of ASME shops running the state boiler rules committee) It compares the EU and ASME standards.
The current situation, is that the "Euro-boilers", Tarm, EKO, Atmos, Froeling, etc... are all built and certified as meeting the EU's CE and EN-303-5 standards by different testing facilities in the different countries. EN-303-5 is a standard that was specifically written for solid fuel boilers, and is a VERY tough spec to meet. The CE standard is roughly equivalent to a UL listing, and at least some of the Euroboilers have gotten cross-listed to be covered by UL as well.
The two major US gassifier brands, Econoburn and Wood Gun normally make boilers that are certified to UL standards, but NOT ASME. However, as an extra-cost option, they will build ASME certified versions, which will typically cost you between $800 and $1,000 extra. The boiler companies don't make any significant profit on this, the upcharge basically covers the not very useful (and arguably bad) extra modifications to the design required by ASME, the added paperwork, and the fact that they have to pay to have an ASME inspector on site to watch the boiler being built... This last "Live inspector" requirement is probably the biggest reason why the Euroboiler makers don't get ASME certification, as the costs to fly an inspector to the EU and have him watch them build boilers would be prohibitive.
In 47 states, the Euroboilers are currently quite acceptable, in three states they aren't...
There is one possible loophole however... The ASME requirement applies ONLY to "pressure vessels" - which by definition requires a closed system. If you have an open system, in theory there should be NO requirements for anything other than possibly a UL listing. See the various discussions about what I call the "European Open" style systems where you have a system that has a high mounted expansion tank that is open to the air, resulting in a system that is technically "open" but acts like a closed system....
Gooserider