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School me on Tankless combo systems

homelessdespot

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Currently shopping for a duplex or single family house and recently ran across a Natural Gas Navien boiler/hot water tankless combo setup in a home. Not familiar with these. Do they work well heating 2000 sq ft homes in cold areas like New England? Are they as efficient as traditional NG boilers?
 
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Jackfre

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Yes, they work and can heat your 2000 sq ft. There are many makes/models available. They will make 4gpm of hot water. Is that enough?
 
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homelessdespot

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Yes, they work and can heat your 2000 sq ft. There are many makes/models available. They will make 4gpm of hot water. Is that enough?

Thanks for the reply. I wonder why in all the houses I've seen only 1 has had one. I don't even know anyone personally who has one. It's all oil or NG boilers in CT with house ages ranging from 1900's to 1970's. Maybe it's the high installed price? In your opinion are they typically more efficient than traditional NG boilers? Or about the same? I see both argued as far as used as hot water heaters only searching past threads here but nothing about efficiency for using them for hot water baseboard/radiator heat.

Hard water? Tankless won’t work in such a case, plug up very quickly.

Ah ok, thanks. Very hard water where I am now and shopping, but I'll check if the house that I find has one. Maybe that's why I don't see any around here.
 
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Jackfre

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Thanks for the reply. I wonder why in all the houses I've seen only 1 has had one. I don't even know anyone personally who has one. It's all oil or NG boilers in CT with house ages ranging from 1900's to 1970's. Maybe it's the high installed price? In your opinion are they typically more efficient than traditional NG boilers? Or about the same? I see both argued as far as used as hot water heaters only searching past threads here but nothing about efficiency for using them for hot water baseboard/radiator heat.



Ah ok, thanks. Very hard water where I am now and shopping, but I'll check if the house that I find has one. Maybe that's why I don't see any around here.

The Combi boilers (heat & hot water) you are referencing are all over CT. I was the Rinnai Rep in CT for 20 years and sold mountains of them. The Combi's have only been available for the last 10 yrs or so. There are a lot of Navien's as well as many others. Yes, the Combi's are more efficient than the conventional cast iron boilers. 95% vs about 80-85%, BUT much depends upon your heat emitters. If the house is hot water baseboard you will not necessarily see as much savings as you have to run the baseboard at 180*. Combis are condensing boilers and do their best work at lower supply temperature. Radiant floors would work with a max temp supply of 120* to the slab. That allows the return water to be very cool so it hits the condensing section of the boiler and wrings the efficiency out of the system. If you are running a 180* supply you will likely return about 160* and not get as much condensing as you want. By all means check your water quality regardless of what equipment you have or buy. Stay up with the maintenance.
 

aunsafe2015

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The Combi boilers (heat & hot water) you are referencing are all over CT. I was the Rinnai Rep in CT for 20 years and sold mountains of them. The Combi's have only been available for the last 10 yrs or so. There are a lot of Navien's as well as many others. Yes, the Combi's are more efficient than the conventional cast iron boilers. 95% vs about 80-85%, BUT much depends upon your heat emitters. If the house is hot water baseboard you will not necessarily see as much savings as you have to run the baseboard at 180*. Combis are condensing boilers and do their best work at lower supply temperature. Radiant floors would work with a max temp supply of 120* to the slab. That allows the return water to be very cool so it hits the condensing section of the boiler and wrings the efficiency out of the system. If you are running a 180* supply you will likely return about 160* and not get as much condensing as you want. By all means check your water quality regardless of what equipment you have or buy. Stay up with the maintenance.
How does the efficiency of using a NG Combi for baseboard or radiator heat compare to a forced air NG furnace?
 
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homelessdespot

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Thanks Jackfire! I'm starting to see more of them in my house hunting. Are there combi units that run on oil instead of gas? Are they more efficient also? Trying to find a place with gas, but oil is the vast majority in the areas I'm looking.
 

HoosierBuddy

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How does the efficiency of using a NG Combi for baseboard or radiator heat compare to a forced air NG furnace?

The efficiencies are going to be comparable.

The advantage of the boiler is going to be that it is radiant heat, which many prefer as it provides a level of quiet and comfort that is unobtainable with forced air.

The advantage of the forced air system is that it is likely to be much less expensive IF central cooling is also desired, as the heating and cooling system will be able to share the same duct work.

If I was building a new house, I'd find the extra $ for radiant myself, but that's just my preference. If I was building a house to sell, I'd go with forced air, as most buyers wouldn't pay the premium.

On the combi boiler idea, I don't know. It's not a lot of cost saving (if any) for the equipment...so no big advantage there. Maybe some saving in space?

PHil
 

99LeCouch

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Might have gone with that combi system for venting reasons. If it's a condensing boiler, those cannot use a regular chimney or b-vent. Has to be PVC vented out the side of the house. There are only so many places those vents can be placed once doors and windows are considered. And, if the chimney was in poor shape, ditching a water heater for the system that does both on one vent was an elegant solution to an expensive chimney re-lining.
 

Jackfre

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Be advised that while it is ubiquitous, PVC is not an approved vent system. Best to use polypropylene which is approved. Centrotherm manuf the PP.
there are no oil combos that I am aware of. Oil is great heat, but given the choice I’d go gas. Oil does not modulate. It is single stage.
 
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mike93lx

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Be advised that while it is ubiquitous, PVC is not an approved vent system. Best to use polypropylene which is approved. Centrotherm manuf the PP.
there are no oil combos that I am aware of. Oil is great heat, but given the choice I’d go gas. Oil does not modulate. It is single stage.

Is there any scenario, outside of someone that owns an oil delivery business, where oil would be preferred over NG?

I switched from oil to gas and cut my bill from $3k/yr to $1200. Plus it is quieter and makes hot water much faster
 

HoosierBuddy

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Is there any scenario, outside of someone that owns an oil delivery business, where oil would be preferred over NG?

I switched from oil to gas and cut my bill from $3k/yr to $1200. Plus it is quieter and makes hot water much faster

Historically there have been times when I have seen fuel oil prices less than natural gas rates for large commercial customers who could accept bulk deliveries. These large customers would maintain dual equipment and would fuel-switch based on if oil was cheaper or gas was cheaper.

The last time I can recall oil actually being cheaper for those customers was winter 2000/2001. Not to say it won't happen next, month....but it's been awhile. And that was just for commercial end-users where the fuel bills ran say $50,000 per month or higher (asphalt plants come to mind).

Phil
 

yeldogt

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Is there any scenario, outside of someone that owns an oil delivery business, where oil would be preferred over NG?

I switched from oil to gas and cut my bill from $3k/yr to $1200. Plus it is quieter and makes hot water much faster

with current NG supplies -- for a typical home. no.
 

yeldogt

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Remember -- it's just hot water. Be it to take a shower or heat a house ... you are heating water.

"combo" is the ability to both supply hot water for heat -- and, also have the capacity to provide hot water for showers ..etc. Typically using either an internal or a supplied secondary heat exchanger.

What people don't fully understand: In order to get that extra amount of efficiency -- the unit needs to extract heat that would normally go up the chimney. That's why you see the word "condensing" somewhere when looking at the unit with 90's efficiencies.

With a forced air furnace the furnace has all of that cold air coming from the house -- a boiler only has the returning water temp.

In cold parts of the country -- using some form of hot water radiation was always the premium way to go. Cast radiators -- cast iron baseboard.. and later copper fin tube baseboard -- all of these require very hot water ... and lots of it. So how to make large amount of hot water .... typically ... simple cast iron boilers connected to a chimney.

When you take one of the condensing boilers and connect it to a system that previously ran a high mass cast iron .... it runs its little brains out ... always trying to make 160+ water to keep up and never able to get cool enough water to "condense" .. the efficiencies never materialize. Often people save lots of money switching -- but its because they have a new boiler and went from oil to NG ..... they would have saved money anyway.

I'm not knocking the units as they work very well in the proper situation ... but they don't often work in retrofit applications with high loads ... that's why the OP may not be seeing them.

I recently redid a large property in Chestnut Hill PA -- mostly radiators. Installed two old school cast iron boilers with outdoor reset .. they "modulate" the water temp by turning on and off. Simple -- almost maintenance free .. easy last 20 years. The modern condensing boilers can actually modulate the gas supply to the burner -- the question is how much is saved ... in a retrofit .. IMO not much if any.
 
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homelessdespot

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The modern condensing boilers can actually modulate the gas supply to the burner -- the question is how much is saved ... in a retrofit .. IMO not much if any.

Super interesting, Thanks for the info! So for condesnsing boilers, what would be better than a retrofit, radiant floor? Is there a type of baseboard radiator for condensing boilers that are more efficient than the retrofitted radiators/basboards mentioned?
 
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Jackfre

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Look at "Panel rads." Rental and Burderus offer them a well as some others I suppose. They are the European type low temp baseboards and will operate at much lower temps than conventional US style baseboard. They also offer towel warmers which are very nice. Yeltdog's post on his recent remodel is spot on for the distribution system in the building. There is no circumstance where I would choose oil over gas, period. Should you go with a combi unit get one with a "proportional" control that will have a hot water priority. Most of the combo's are 120-199kbtu. A 2000 sq ft decently built home will need 80,000 btu or less for heat. Many combi units give wither hot water OR space heat. I just saw the new Rinnai model I and it will continue to heat the space as well as the hot water. As the hot water load builds more of the burner capacity will be shed from heating. Pretty cool!
 

HoosierBuddy

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When you take one of the condensing boilers and connect it to a system that previously ran a high mass cast iron .... it runs its little brains out ... always trying to make 160+ water to keep up and never able to get cool enough water to "condense" .. the efficiencies never materialize..

You lost me there yeldogt.

I mean, I agree that the efficiency gain is because less heat is going up the flue with a fully condensing unit. I'm not seeing how running flat out, a fully condensing boiler is less efficient than it is when modulating.

If a wall boiler is (say) 93% efficient, that means it is losing 7% of the available BTU's in the fuel out the vent when it's burning. I would expect in the real world it will get closer and closer to it's rated efficiency the longer the cycle time...not the shorter.

Are you saying it loses efficiency because the water temperature is set so high? If so, do the manufacturer's publish the derate somewhere for sizing purposes? I'd be interested in learning more about this.

Phil
 

yeldogt

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Super interesting, Thanks for the info! So for condesnsing boilers, what would be better than a retrofit, radiant floor? Is there a type of baseboard radiator for condensing boilers that are more efficient than the retrofitted radiators/basboards mentioned?

I did not put in my post because it was alluded to in an earlier post -- the "condensing" occurs when the cool return water is used to cool the exhaust gases -- this extracts heat from the hot flue gas -- heating up the returning water before it goes back to be reheated in the boiler. Doing this produces water -- that's why condensing units require a pump/ drain. The water come out of the flue gasses

A typical non condensing boiler (furnace) sends the very hot flue gases up the flue/vent/chimney -- the water is taken with it.

Yes -- radiant is great for condensing boiler s .. because it uses lower temp water.

As Jackfre mentioned -- there are other types of radiators that can be used.

Example: For the house I mentioned above in Chestnut Hill. The entire heating system was over sized ... originally a coal fired boiler. All the radiators when supplied with 180 degree water would over heat the space. Two ways to control the system -- thermostats on the wall making an on/off situation ... or having each radiator w/ a thermostatic head that allowed water to flow.

A third way occurred when outdoor reset became available: you can now send cooler water throughout the house continually. Instead of making 180 degree water on a 40 degree day .. you make 130 degree water .. or 120 degree water. Whatever is needed ... the boiler's water temp is controlled based on the outside temp. It takes a little trial and error but eventually you can actually match. A modern wall boiler can modulate the gas fired to achieve the temp ... the old school cast iron fires on and off keeping the water temp constant.


When cooper fin baseboard became the norm -- the installer would do a heat load and factor the amount of baseboard based on the water temp. Well -- you can do many feet less of baseboard at 200 degree water vs 160 degree water ..... what do you think got installed? It was cheaper and the installer made more money putting in less feet and cranking up the boiler. But you can read the tables and they will show you how many feet to install with 150 degree water .. etc. Copper baseboard can be sized to be continuous w/ outdoor reset.

On of my projects was a deep retrofit where much of the heat was underfloor plates -- not as efficient as slab or some other floor systems. I figured we would run 130 - 140 degree water on cold days. So in the spaces that I could not do radiant -- or that would not get enough heat from the floor (too many windows/ old plaster stone walls) I added panel radiators .... factoring the output at 140 degree water. IE: I installed larger panels.

My newest project is almost all radiant (warmboard/slab/ a few panels) -- the goal is to try to use all the same water temp. With a wall condensing boiler and outdoor reset I shod be able to run low temp water most of the time .. condensing. This house is propane ... so the fuel cost is greater .. it's also larger 5k+. I'm not using a combi -- it will have an indirect.

Combi units add the issue of hot water .. it's no different vs an "on demand' unit. It is an "on demand" unit. They work great in some applications. But again -- it just hot water. If you need huge amounts of hot water -- I use one for a dedicated outdoor shower at my beach house .. they are great. It may not give you anything if you are a typically household w/ NG -- a tank or indirect is hard to beat. Sometimes rebates make the difference.
 
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homelessdespot

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Very cool setups, thanks for the explanation. I'll probably be stuck with whatever setup is in what I buy if it's in good running condition, but I'll definitely will shoot for NG instead of oil. The price difference is so huge here. And if I ever need to replace or split into two boilers for an apartment, I have a better idea of what's possible.

Makes me think of a house I saw where the 1 bedroom finished attic apartment was on a separate combi while the rest of the house was on a conventional cast iron NG boiler. Pretty good way for the homeowner to split the utilities.
 

johnnyradiant

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Might have gone with that combi system for venting reasons. If it's a condensing boiler, those cannot use a regular chimney or b-vent. Has to be PVC vented out the side of the house. There are only so many places those vents can be placed once doors and windows are considered. And, if the chimney was in poor shape, ditching a water heater for the system that does both on one vent was an elegant solution to an expensive chimney re-lining.

I have vented up the old flue/chimney on a couple occasions when installing new higher efficient equipment. There are vent kits for going up instead 'horizontally'. You just have to make sure your system is capable of going up the amount you need/desire. On retrofits it can get very difficult very fast finding a 'horizontal' route when there are openings that MUST be avoided and then if you have code not letting you go out the sides if your in the city (most around here won't let you vent towards a neighbour's property).
 

bob15

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Ah ok, thanks. Very hard water where I am now and shopping, but I'll check if the house that I find has one. Maybe that's why I don't see any around here.

If it is hard water, are you running a softener? You really should. I have hard water and tankless system and have had zero issues....but I also have a softener. Wouldn't want to live in my house without one. Also have a LP boiler.......
 
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