The system takes a long time to heat
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Published
July 10, 2009
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If you don't have any main vents, the steam will compress the trapped air and stop moving. If you have main vents, steam will travel quickly through the mains and reach the radiators in no time at all.
Main vents belong near the ends of the mains, but never put them in a tee right at the very end of the main. If you do, water hammer might clobber them within the first few cycles. Pipe your main vents at least 15 inches back from the end of the main, and six-to-ten inches up on a nipple. This means you may have to cut and thread the pipe in place to get the main vents in, but it's well worth the effort.
Don't install a three-quarter-inch vent in a one-eighth-inch hole you drilled and tapped in the main. You can't vent much air though a hole that small.
High-velocity air can carry sediment toward the working vents and clog them. So when you hear the vents hissing, they're trying to tell you something. Add main vents (or more main vents) to the system.
Check, too, the water's cleanliness and pH. You may have to clean the boiler and the system, and balance the water's pH with chemicals to get it right. A good pH for a steam boiler ranges between seven (neutral) and nine (mildly alkaline).
The pressuretrol's cut-out setting is another thing. It should be no higher than the pressure it takes to get steam from the boiler to the furthest radiator. The pressure you need is a function of pipe size and boiler size, and the Dead Man figured it out years before you and I were born.
When in doubt, crank the pressure down.
If your return line drops below the inlet to the receiver, however, you'll have problems. That return line isn't under pressure because it's downstream of the radiator and end-of-main F&T traps. As condensate drains from the radiators and pipes, it will pool in that water leg and form a seal. Air won't vent through that water seal, and it will take forever to heat the building.
If the traps are defective they'll mask this problem because there will be enough pressure to force the condensate out of the water leg. A lot of water hammer usually accompanies this evacuation of the water. The noise usually encourages the building owner to have his traps fixed. But once the traps are fixed, he'll have little or no heat because the air can't through the water seal. At this point, you have two choices. Raise the return line to eliminate the water seal, or install main vents at the outlet sides of the end-of-main F&T traps.



