My house is heated by a radiant heat system that uses a natural gas water heater. Apparently the hot water circulated through the radiant heat system is also the hot water that we get from the taps. I'd like to shutdown the radiant heat during the summer because it seems silly to pump hot water through the walls.
It looks to me that the water comes from the water heater, through a pump on a timer, through a valve with a red handle, then splits into many tubes that go to registers in the house, then comes back through tubes and joins into one pipe, through a valve with a blue handle, and back to the hot water tank. There are some other pipes for the house's tap water that are connected to the radiant heat system on its way back to the tank, but I don't think I could accurately describe them. I can take a picture if needed.
The only way I can see to disable the radiant system is to turn off the valve before the pipe splits into tubes and is distributed throughout the house, and to turn off the valve after the return tubes combine back into a pipe. I would also have to unplug the pump that is on a timer, so that it doesn't burn up pumping against a closed valve. I think this would cause the water to sit in the tubes in the walls throughout the house. Is this ok? I'm worried something might grow and contaminate the tap water. How often would I have to open the valves and run the pump to keep this from happening?
Is there any other way to disable the system?
It looks to me that the water comes from the water heater, through a pump on a timer, through a valve with a red handle, then splits into many tubes that go to registers in the house, then comes back through tubes and joins into one pipe, through a valve with a blue handle, and back to the hot water tank. There are some other pipes for the house's tap water that are connected to the radiant heat system on its way back to the tank, but I don't think I could accurately describe them. I can take a picture if needed.
The only way I can see to disable the radiant system is to turn off the valve before the pipe splits into tubes and is distributed throughout the house, and to turn off the valve after the return tubes combine back into a pipe. I would also have to unplug the pump that is on a timer, so that it doesn't burn up pumping against a closed valve. I think this would cause the water to sit in the tubes in the walls throughout the house. Is this ok? I'm worried something might grow and contaminate the tap water. How often would I have to open the valves and run the pump to keep this from happening?
Is there any other way to disable the system?