FDNYRETIRED
Member
Hello I did a intro in the intro thread so this is my second post. To get right down to it. I am about to decide what to use to heat my garage and storage space. Which is really going to be a work place. My house was raised due to Sandy and I finally got back in over the summer. Now I am deciding if I should use Modine Hydronic hanging units or Modine hanging Gas units. I have Natural gas. My house walls below the raised section, was built with ICF fox blocks. I have 8 flood vents 4 of which have louvers controlled by bimetal springs. I consider my insulation once I deal with the vents to be a 0.5 if I do not keep opening the garage door. My whole house is pretty tight since it has been almost completely rebuilt.
The garage and Storage Space specs are:
Garage area is 18'x17' with a 13' ceiling. which comes out to 9,113.820 watts that converts to 31,078.125 BTU's. There is also a 6'x17' with a 5' ceiling under the room which use to be on ground level. That is also part of the garage. So for that I come up with 1,168.438 watts that converts to 3,984.375 BTU's. If I add both those up I come up with 35,062.5 BTU's
The Storage space is 26'x19' with a 9' ceiling. For that I come up with 10,186.034 watts which is 34,737.375 BTU's. If I add the Garage and Storage space together. It is 69,799.875 BTUs according to my math. Now the problem is that it is not a total open space between both rooms But it is seperated by Fox Blocks also. With a door that leads to the Garage and the storage space. Then actually what I call the crawl space in the garage also has a wall, But that is only sheetrock on both sides of the studs. There are 2 openings on either side you can get through to get under there. So I really can't put one heating unit in. I need to heat these rooms because the garage contains all my water supply pipes to the house. Also I have a Full pressurized water Fire sprinkler system through the house. With 2 heads in the garage ceiling. and 2 heads in the Storage ceiling.
My idea was to put two Natural Gas 30,000 or 45,000 BTU Hot Dawg heaters, with separated combustion gas ceiling hung units in each room. Then I had a Navien Tech come to help me set up my Outdoor Reset for the Sensor. I have a Navien NCB-240-E Condensing Combi-Boiler. The Boiler runs two zones for the house. Zone one runs most of the house. Zone 2 is actually for a 12' slant fin base board heater for the play room which has a sliding door and the boiler room. It is is Split Level Ranch. All together 4 floors with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, Living room, Kitchen and Dining room. Not including the 2 halls.
He says I should run two 50,000 BTU hydronic units off the Navien boiler. Which I thought did make sense. Until I realized that Modine units run at 80% AFUE compared to my boiler which is 95% AFUE when set up right. I am over powered for my house and we cut the Max heating capacity down to 80% for now. I have the Heat load setting set to supply 120-180*f water, and my return is 101-147*F. I am sitting in the 140*F range on return running 2 zones and it went down to 32*F last night around here on Long Island.
So I did a little more research and I think my option if I go with Hydronic units from Modine. Are the Lodronic Low-Temperature Hydronic Heater (HCH) Units. They are $$$ compared to the normal Hydronic units. Then I was looking at the Specs. They make two models:
HHD 30 which with a flow of 5GPM which is what I am set up for from my boiler. Will give me 19,600BTU's @ 120*F water temp to 39,200 BTU's @ 180*F inlet water temp. all at a 405 CFM range. then there is a
HHD 40 which will give me the same at 425 CFM range and 28,400 -56,800 BTU's at a 710CFM range. Then they have a HCH unit with 6 different models depending on BTU's but they are bigger and look like they deal with commercial property. Then they say For conditions other than shown above, please refer to the Modine Breeze® AccuSpec program for detailed performance data.
Allowable water temperature range is 100°F to 200°F. Allowable indoor air temperature range is 40°F to 100°F. If temperatures below freezing are expected, provisions should be made to either
drain the unit heater coil or utilize a continually circulating glycol solution.
I can't do that since it is hooked to my Navien unit. So what would my options be?
The garage and Storage Space specs are:
Garage area is 18'x17' with a 13' ceiling. which comes out to 9,113.820 watts that converts to 31,078.125 BTU's. There is also a 6'x17' with a 5' ceiling under the room which use to be on ground level. That is also part of the garage. So for that I come up with 1,168.438 watts that converts to 3,984.375 BTU's. If I add both those up I come up with 35,062.5 BTU's
The Storage space is 26'x19' with a 9' ceiling. For that I come up with 10,186.034 watts which is 34,737.375 BTU's. If I add the Garage and Storage space together. It is 69,799.875 BTUs according to my math. Now the problem is that it is not a total open space between both rooms But it is seperated by Fox Blocks also. With a door that leads to the Garage and the storage space. Then actually what I call the crawl space in the garage also has a wall, But that is only sheetrock on both sides of the studs. There are 2 openings on either side you can get through to get under there. So I really can't put one heating unit in. I need to heat these rooms because the garage contains all my water supply pipes to the house. Also I have a Full pressurized water Fire sprinkler system through the house. With 2 heads in the garage ceiling. and 2 heads in the Storage ceiling.
My idea was to put two Natural Gas 30,000 or 45,000 BTU Hot Dawg heaters, with separated combustion gas ceiling hung units in each room. Then I had a Navien Tech come to help me set up my Outdoor Reset for the Sensor. I have a Navien NCB-240-E Condensing Combi-Boiler. The Boiler runs two zones for the house. Zone one runs most of the house. Zone 2 is actually for a 12' slant fin base board heater for the play room which has a sliding door and the boiler room. It is is Split Level Ranch. All together 4 floors with 3 bedrooms, 2 full baths, Living room, Kitchen and Dining room. Not including the 2 halls.
He says I should run two 50,000 BTU hydronic units off the Navien boiler. Which I thought did make sense. Until I realized that Modine units run at 80% AFUE compared to my boiler which is 95% AFUE when set up right. I am over powered for my house and we cut the Max heating capacity down to 80% for now. I have the Heat load setting set to supply 120-180*f water, and my return is 101-147*F. I am sitting in the 140*F range on return running 2 zones and it went down to 32*F last night around here on Long Island.
So I did a little more research and I think my option if I go with Hydronic units from Modine. Are the Lodronic Low-Temperature Hydronic Heater (HCH) Units. They are $$$ compared to the normal Hydronic units. Then I was looking at the Specs. They make two models:
HHD 30 which with a flow of 5GPM which is what I am set up for from my boiler. Will give me 19,600BTU's @ 120*F water temp to 39,200 BTU's @ 180*F inlet water temp. all at a 405 CFM range. then there is a
HHD 40 which will give me the same at 425 CFM range and 28,400 -56,800 BTU's at a 710CFM range. Then they have a HCH unit with 6 different models depending on BTU's but they are bigger and look like they deal with commercial property. Then they say For conditions other than shown above, please refer to the Modine Breeze® AccuSpec program for detailed performance data.
Allowable water temperature range is 100°F to 200°F. Allowable indoor air temperature range is 40°F to 100°F. If temperatures below freezing are expected, provisions should be made to either
drain the unit heater coil or utilize a continually circulating glycol solution.
I can't do that since it is hooked to my Navien unit. So what would my options be?