iCreek
ArboristSite Guru
Wow, we had a nice day today in the midwest, 50 degrees this afternoon. Worked out great for getting my Hardy outdoor stove fired up and running. I attached some photos, it was good to see smoke come out the chimney.
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Not sure I have my domestic water working correctly though. The way the pump works at the stove end, it pumps when a relay is triggered from the furnace needing more heat. When the inside home thermostat gets below the set temperature, it turns on the pump and pumps water into the Pex lines (see below pic) going to my AIC water to water exchanger to heat the domestic water, then that heated water goes into my water heater tank. After the hot (stove in) leaves the water to water heat exchanger, it goes into the air to water heat exchanger, to provide heat for the forced air furnace. What I noticed was that the water lines get cold inside the house, where the Pex terminates into the exchangers. This happens when the pump sits idle for a few hours, it was warm today so the thermostat did not kick on much today.
My question is do most people that heat domestic water inside, run the pumps all the time? I think I can do that, but others in my family that run these Hardy stoves, have the pump turn on only when heat is needed, they heat the domestic water out at the stove with an additional pump and two lines. The guy that hooked up my relays and thermostat said it could be hooked up either way. I guess the only way for heated water to flow through the water to water exchanger at all times is to run the pump all the time? This might not be an issue as it gets colder outside and the pump runs more frequent, but today I noticed the inside Pex pipes getting cold,75 degrees, after a few hours. I still have my propane pilot set to Med., I was just wanting to drop it down and save more propane $$. Any ideas or suggestions?
(additional question about water to air furnace exchanger)
Another thing I noticed this evening, when the furnace first kicks on, the air at the registers is cold/warm, then it warms up after 1 -2 minutes and feels hot. I think this has to do with the water cooling down in the lines, going into the heat exchanger, then warming up as the pump circulates the warmer water into the system, is this normal?
Here is a pic for reference, AIC water to water heat exchanger on top, then the water to air heat exchanger in the furnace below. The Cold Soft Water to OWB is for filling the water levels.
View attachment 63742
View attachment 63743
View attachment 63744
View attachment 63745
Not sure I have my domestic water working correctly though. The way the pump works at the stove end, it pumps when a relay is triggered from the furnace needing more heat. When the inside home thermostat gets below the set temperature, it turns on the pump and pumps water into the Pex lines (see below pic) going to my AIC water to water exchanger to heat the domestic water, then that heated water goes into my water heater tank. After the hot (stove in) leaves the water to water heat exchanger, it goes into the air to water heat exchanger, to provide heat for the forced air furnace. What I noticed was that the water lines get cold inside the house, where the Pex terminates into the exchangers. This happens when the pump sits idle for a few hours, it was warm today so the thermostat did not kick on much today.
My question is do most people that heat domestic water inside, run the pumps all the time? I think I can do that, but others in my family that run these Hardy stoves, have the pump turn on only when heat is needed, they heat the domestic water out at the stove with an additional pump and two lines. The guy that hooked up my relays and thermostat said it could be hooked up either way. I guess the only way for heated water to flow through the water to water exchanger at all times is to run the pump all the time? This might not be an issue as it gets colder outside and the pump runs more frequent, but today I noticed the inside Pex pipes getting cold,75 degrees, after a few hours. I still have my propane pilot set to Med., I was just wanting to drop it down and save more propane $$. Any ideas or suggestions?
(additional question about water to air furnace exchanger)
Another thing I noticed this evening, when the furnace first kicks on, the air at the registers is cold/warm, then it warms up after 1 -2 minutes and feels hot. I think this has to do with the water cooling down in the lines, going into the heat exchanger, then warming up as the pump circulates the warmer water into the system, is this normal?
Here is a pic for reference, AIC water to water heat exchanger on top, then the water to air heat exchanger in the furnace below. The Cold Soft Water to OWB is for filling the water levels.
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