Radiator Enclosures
Info
Author
Dan Holohan
Published
November 2, 2009
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Should you box those radiators?
Let’s take a look at
radiator enclosures. Some people use them because they think old radiators are
ugly (I sure don’t). Others use them to protect children from burns (I recall touching
a red-hot steam radiator when I was a kid growing up in
Take a look at that chart up above from the old days. We'll go over each
First, we have a radiator with a solid board
in front of it. That board is going to create a chimney effect for this
radiator. The air that comes in contact with the hot metal will quickly rise,
drawing in cool air from the bottom of the board. Because more air will come in
contact with more hot metal, the chart tells us to deduct 10%. What that means
is that if you have a room that needs a radiator capable of putting out, say,
100 Square Feet E.D.R., you could use a radiator rated at 90 Square Feet E.D.R.
in this case because the board is increasing the air flow across the radiator.
It’s similar to what happens when you start a fan and allow it to blow across a
radiator. More air flow means more heat output.
Okay, move to the right. This next radiator has a simple
shelf across its top. That shelf is impeding the air flow off the hot metal, so
we’re going to have less convection with this one. If we needed 100 Square Feet
E.D.R., we’d have to size the radiator for 120 Square Feet E.D.R. to compensate
for the lesser convection. Make sense? (This could actually help you if the
radiator is too big for the room.)
The radiator to the right of that one has an enclosure
that’s similar to the first one. We have a solid front and a top and bottom that
are perforated with lots of holes, giving air a way in and out. Because of this
design, we can deduct 5%. So if you needed 100 Square Feet E.D.R., you’d be
able to get by with 95 Square Feet E.D.R.
Oh, and this is a good point to mention that when you’re
measuring radiators for a boiler replacement, please ignore those enclosures in
your measurements. You have no way of knowing whether someone will remove those
enclosures as time goes by. Better to be safe than have a boiler that’s
suddenly too small or too large.
Let’s move to the bottom row, starting on the left. This next
enclosure is well-made and it neither slows the air nor speeds it up, so there
will be no change in the radiator’s output.
Moving to the right, we see the classic radiator
enclosure. This is the one that you’ll see lots of companies selling nowadays.
It has a solid top that’s usually hinged (so that when you open it you can see
all the cobwebs and other crap that’s fallen in there). It also has a
perforated wood or metal front, drilled with hundreds of holes. There’s little
or no chimney effect with this enclosure so we have to add 30% to its size if
we want the same output that we’d get without this enclosure. So if we need 100
Square Feet E.D.R., we’d have to size for 130 Square Feet E.D.R. And once
again, don’t add that to your
measurements when you’re sizing a replacement boiler.
Finally, we have this last one on the lower right. This
is very similar to the previous one (there are lots and lots of holes in the
front) but we’ve added holes to the top so that’s going to let the hot air
escape. You’ll have to add 5% to this one; so to get 100 Square Feet E.D.R.,
you’ll need to size for 105 Square Feet E.D.R.
And keep in mind that you are not the one sizing the radiation to the room’s heat loss. The Dead Man
did that years ago. He may or may not have sized for these enclosures. You have
no way of knowing unless you do a heat-loss calculation on the room as it was
in the old days (and how are you going to do that?). And then you’ll have to check
the size of the radiator against that heat loss. Trust me on this. If you’re
measuring radiators for the purpose of replacing the boiler, take the
measurements as if the enclosures were not there. You’ll be fine.
Oh, and notice how in all of these drawings, the radiator
is positioned two inches away from the wall, and two inches away from the front
of the enclosure. That’s an ideal spacing for air flow. Keep this in mind if
you ever have to move a radiator.


