Keeping the Boiler Running All Summer



Written on September 18, 2006 – 2:56 pm | by gaulardcom |


When we first moved into our house, the was turned off. We had no idea why. The told us that it was turned off during inspection, so therefore he could not comment on the operation of it. What a great inspector! I guess it was too far of a reach for him to lean over on the wall and flick the little red switch on. Oh well…the was only 3 years old, so we gave it the benefit of the doubt.

The first day we moved in, I went downstairs and turned the red switch to the “On” position. In about 5 seconds, I heard it kick on and start right up. The thing worked great, but that is not what this post is about. This is a helpful post to all those poor innocent souls who have been told that they should keep their on all summer long to avoid on the inside. Let me explain.

Once I turned the on in the middle of August, I questioned the operation of it during the hottest months of the summer. It only provided heat for the house, since we are using an electric for everything else. I asked a few people if I needed to keep the running all summer and I got the same response: “Yes, it will if you don’t.” I didn’t ask too many questions because this same response came from a few different sources. Well, today, Paul and I were having a conversation about how I already spent $150 this summer from just keeping the warm. He said, “Well, that’s from up your water to use upstairs.” I told him that we have an electric for that. He asked why I don’t just shut off the then. He gave me a small chuckle, the way only Paul knows how to do, and explained that the won’t unless…well something about in the lines. He said it would be fine. I didn’t believe him, so I called my , Porco Energy. A woman answered the phone and I explained to her my concern. She then told me the exact thing Paul just told me, that I could turn the off during the summer!

Guess what I am doing when I get home tonight. I really wish someone told me this in May.

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  1. 2 Responses to “Keeping the Boiler Running All Summer”

  2. By Paul on Sep 18, 2006 | Reply

    Hi Jay, the term rust means oxidation. In order to oxidize, the material must have contact with oxygen such as what is in air. If it is full of water, it will have minimum contact with oxygen, therefore the possibility of rust is small. Cooler temperatures will actually inhibit oxidation.

    When in operation, the boiler must maintain a minimum temperature to prevent condensation of the flue gases. Usually the return water from your heating loop should be not cooler than 140 deg F. (or whatever your boiler manufacture recommends). That may be where the confusion is. Hope that helps.

  3. By gaulardcom on Sep 18, 2006 | Reply

    This whole thing makes me wonder what my sources were referring to when they said a part of the boiler would rust. I now wonder if they meant the flu pipe or another part.

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This is my blog. Welcome to it. I write a lot of stuff that doesn't pertain to anything in particular, but you may find a common theme in here somewhere. Enjoy. More

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