Quote:
Originally posted by johnsp
I disagree. Having a coil that can lime/scale up.
True, but recovery with an aquabank style hot water heater is not important. So even if the coil limes up, it will continue to be effective for quite some time. I see it firsthand in my location....tankless coils without storage tanks have a hard time supplying alot of hot water, but the same setup but with a storage tank at the very next house (figuratively speaking) is just fine. Hot water is all about how much you can store, not how fast you can make it. Take for example the typical indirect hot water makers (Phase III, Bock, BoilerMate, etc), their hot water making ability is maybe 3 gallons per minute. That is not alot of hot water recovery.
Quote:
Originally posted by johnsp
The gasket starts leaking after 10 years,
After 10 yrs?...kinda an exageration. But if it does leak, the gasket is cheap and the repair is not all that tough on a cast iron boiler.
Quote:
Originally posted by johnsp
and you have to heat up the space durring the summer keeping the boiler at temp.
A warm boiler is a clean boiler. See my original comments on cold start boilers.
Quote:
Originally posted by johnsp
Just get a low mass steel boiler like the Burnham LE. Why keep 10 gals + of hot boiler water in the boiler so the BTU's just go up the stack? Low mass is used in just about all the condensing gas boilers. Why should an oil boiler be different.
HUGE difference in my experience comparing gas with oil boilers. The Burnham LE in my experience, as well, is not a great boiler (at least with a Beckett AF burner). Never seen one run clean yet. Cold start wreaks havoc on all oil boilers, even more dramatic on the low mass units. They can't take any clogging of their flue passages whatsoever, so they soot up real fast.