Vermontchill
New Member
Hi,
I have a bit of a strange setup that I am considering and has hoping to get some feedback and ideas.
My wife and I run a mid sized B&B in vermont with 19 guest rooms. Up until a few weeks ago, our heat was provided by 2- 250,000 BTU boilers. The boilers fed a hydronic loop in the attic that fed fan coil units for each room. The boilers also heated 2 119gallon storage tanks for domestic hot water, with a recirc loop so the guest rooms would get fast hot water.
We were flooded out last week and our boiler room was under 5 feet of water. All of the technicians that have looked at the boilers have basically said its not worth repairing due to the extent of damage.
Our heat is no big deal. We already have electric baseboards in the room for backup heat. The old boiler and fan coil system was so ineffecient (I estimate less that 50% efficient), and with oil prices north of $3/gallon, the electric baseboards aren't such a bad option.
Our domestic hot water is another story. Ideally I would just get 1 big 100 gallon, 300,000BTU hot water heater, but I really don't have $10,000 sitting around to spend on one. I was considering trying a 199,000 BTU Rinnai tankless with a recirc line controlled by an aquastat, to keep my existing 119gallon storage tanks hot, When I have a bit more money, I would by 3 or 4 more tankless heaters and eliminate the storage tanks, or at least just switch to 1 small storage tank.
I have a recirc line going out to the guest rooms. I was planning on trying to control it with an flow switch on the cold water fill line for the tanks, that would turn on a 1/25hp circulator, that way when a guest turns on a shower, it gets hot water out to them in a reasonable amount of time (not instananeous, but better than waiting 10 minutes to drain out a 1 1/2 inch pipe). An aquastat on the return line would shut off the circulator when hot water makes its way back to the boiler room.
I am estimating peak demand to be around 24gpm. The showers all have 1.5gpm shower heads, and I can't imagine more that 16 people showering at once. Peak demand would be a rare occurrence though and I think the tankless should help the system recover pretty fast.
Does this system seem like it would work? I was thinking of using Rinnai tankless heaters, since they make it really easy to add a 2nd tankless if one is not meeting peak demand.
I appreciate your opinions.
I have a bit of a strange setup that I am considering and has hoping to get some feedback and ideas.
My wife and I run a mid sized B&B in vermont with 19 guest rooms. Up until a few weeks ago, our heat was provided by 2- 250,000 BTU boilers. The boilers fed a hydronic loop in the attic that fed fan coil units for each room. The boilers also heated 2 119gallon storage tanks for domestic hot water, with a recirc loop so the guest rooms would get fast hot water.
We were flooded out last week and our boiler room was under 5 feet of water. All of the technicians that have looked at the boilers have basically said its not worth repairing due to the extent of damage.
Our heat is no big deal. We already have electric baseboards in the room for backup heat. The old boiler and fan coil system was so ineffecient (I estimate less that 50% efficient), and with oil prices north of $3/gallon, the electric baseboards aren't such a bad option.
Our domestic hot water is another story. Ideally I would just get 1 big 100 gallon, 300,000BTU hot water heater, but I really don't have $10,000 sitting around to spend on one. I was considering trying a 199,000 BTU Rinnai tankless with a recirc line controlled by an aquastat, to keep my existing 119gallon storage tanks hot, When I have a bit more money, I would by 3 or 4 more tankless heaters and eliminate the storage tanks, or at least just switch to 1 small storage tank.
I have a recirc line going out to the guest rooms. I was planning on trying to control it with an flow switch on the cold water fill line for the tanks, that would turn on a 1/25hp circulator, that way when a guest turns on a shower, it gets hot water out to them in a reasonable amount of time (not instananeous, but better than waiting 10 minutes to drain out a 1 1/2 inch pipe). An aquastat on the return line would shut off the circulator when hot water makes its way back to the boiler room.
I am estimating peak demand to be around 24gpm. The showers all have 1.5gpm shower heads, and I can't imagine more that 16 people showering at once. Peak demand would be a rare occurrence though and I think the tankless should help the system recover pretty fast.
Does this system seem like it would work? I was thinking of using Rinnai tankless heaters, since they make it really easy to add a 2nd tankless if one is not meeting peak demand.
I appreciate your opinions.