The heat in the building is very uneven
Info
Published
July 10, 2009
Subscribe to RSS feed
As oil- and gas-fired systems grew in popularity, the Dead Men faced a problem. Unlike the coal-fired boilers, these new burners cycled on and off. The thermostat often shut off the burner before the steam reached the end of that long main.
To solve their problem, the Dead Men began to pipe their jobs differently. Rather than use a single long main with short takeoffs to the radiators, they used several mains, each heading in a different direction. With these shorter mains, the runs to the radiators usually had to be longer. But that didn't present much of a problem as long as the Dead Men dripped and pitched their lines properly.
If you find yourself facing one of those old, coal-fired piping arrangements, put as many air vents as you can near the end of the main. Your goal is to get the air out of the main quickly so the steam favors that route. If you can fill the main with steam as though it were a long heating trough, you'll do a much better job of balancing the heat throughout the building.
But some installers get mixed up. They install the quick air vents far from the boiler, and the slow air vents close to the boiler. They don't pay attention to the size of the radiator when they're doing this. You see, if you use main vents, the steam will favor the main and arrive at most of the radiator supply valves simultaneously. That's why you should vent one-pipe radiators in relation to their size, not their location in the building. This is the key to balancing one-pipe steam heat.
Some control manufacturers use a pressuretrol to figure out when steam fills the piping and radiation. It's easy to trick a pressuretrol - all it takes is a dirt in the pressuretrol or pigtail. If the heat in the building is uneven, check that pressuretrol.
Other heat-timing devices use a thermistor to sense temperature rather than pressure. You'd usually place the thermistor at the end of the longest steam main, but there are no fixed rules. It varies from building to building. However, if the thermistor is on a main that has a clogged air vent, the burner will run all the time. That's because the trapped air will keep the steam from reaching the thermistor.
Check, too, for thermistors that wind up on cold water lines, drain lines and, yes, even gas lines. It happens.
If you have a gravity-return system, make sure the thermistor is high enough on the main. It needs to be below the "A" or "B" Dimension so the rising condensate doesn't cover and cool it. (See The Lost Art of Steam Heating for a complete discussion of "A" and "B" Dimensions.)
Steam fills each main because the air escapes through the main vents. Some mains are shorter than others, however, and the steam will usually travel through these more quickly than it will through longer mains. That's why it's important in a gravity-return system that the ends of all the mains join below the boiler water line. If they join above the water line, the steam will zip through the shorter main. It will shut the longer main's air vent before the steam in that pipe can reach the vent. That leads to a very uneven heating system.
The Dead Men used boilers that had higher water lines than you'll find in modern, low-water-content boilers. Their end-of-main piping connections may have come together below the water line of their old boiler, but it might not be the same with your new boiler.
Check your water line against those connections. If you find they're coming together above the water line, drop the returns to the floor and connect them there.
If you suspect the boiler or the burner is too small, measure the radiators in the building, add a suitable pick-up factor for the piping and check it against what's there. The burner must fire to this load as well.
If it's a gravity-return system, drip into a wet return or into a loop seal and then to a dry return.
If the job has a condensate- or boiler-feed pump, use a steam trap at the base of the riser drip and flow by gravity from the trap to the pump's receiver.
If you run the system at very low pressure, you can use the loop seals with a dry return instead of the riser traps. But if you do this, keep in mind that if someone raises the system pressure, you'll have water hammer problems and steam at your condensate- or boiler-feed pumps.
Try raising the water line to within an inch of the top of the gauge glass. If the water in the boiler is clean it will not surge over the top of the gauge glass.
Check the pH of the water with pH paper. A good pH for a steam system is between seven and nine. If the pH gets to 11, the water will begin to prime and foam and carry over into the system, causing water hammer. Dead Men often added vinegar to steam heating systems to lower the pH and improve the steam quality.
If the building heats unevenly, make sure the water is clean.
Did anyone add pipe dope to cure a leak? If so, the boiler is probably producing wet steam. Wet steam doesn't travel far. If the steam can't make it to the far radiators, the building will heat unevenly.
Check to make sure you have the thermostat properly calibrated. And use an ammeter when you're checking; don't guess at that anticipator setting. If the thermostat has a mercury switch, make sure it's hanging level on the wall. See if the thermostat is subject to cold drafts or if it's hanging on a poorly insulated outside wall.
Get the boiler manufacturer's installation-and-operating manual and check the piping on the job against the drawings in their booklet.
There should be a large main vent near the end of each main, but not right at the end in a tee. If the main vent is at the end of the main, water hammer might damage it. Place the vent at least 15 inches back from the end of the main, and up on a six-inch nipple. This gets it out of the way of any water hammer damage.
If you vent the mains properly, the steam will travel more evenly through the piping system, and many of your uneven-heating problems will disappear. Missing main vents can also make the burner short-cycle, and this can lead to uneven heat throughout the building.
Insulate all steam pipes.
Insulate all the steam pipes.
Get rid of any bullheaded tee you find in a steam line.



