In my house boating days I used two oil filled wall mounted
electric heaters with built in fans and they worked great. I
had 60amp service to the boat
"Jim Richardson" wrote in message
...
On Sat, 08 Oct 2005 18:03:13 GMT,
Brian Whatcott wrote:
On Sat, 08 Oct 2005 09:55:54 GMT, "Dennis Pogson"
wrote:
Courtney Thomas wrote:
How do the forced air units compare with the hot water ?
Thank you,
Courtney
I would guess that pumping hot water at low pressure
through radiators and
associated piping requires a lot less power than
forced-air blowing. At
least, that is our experience, and the heat is much more
evenly distributed.
Also, those areas which didn't need heat were simply
turned off, or the
radiator stat was turned low to suit the
environment/occupants. The system
is silent, which makes for peace and quiet. Drilling
through bulkheads etc.
is a darned sight easier when the holes are merely 1" dia.
or less, against
the 3"-4" holes required for air tubing. Quickly drying
wet clothing and
washed items is an absolute godsend, and this alone makes
up for any
disadvantages of hot water heating.
The heating unit is very quick to achieve operating
temperature, and for
cold the system started to be effective in about 15
minutes. If an en-suite
radiator is inadvertently left full on, the heads would
become a sauna!
Although diesel-fired, our boat seemed to survive the
winter on very little
fuel, admittedly, we had 2 * 60 gallon tanks, but the
guage never seemed to
move much over winter.
I am completely sold on this form of heating against the
forced-air systems.
Dennis.
Interesting observations. In countries where the need is
for heating
only, nobody uses blown air. It's noisy, and its dirty.
But when the need is for cooling, circulating water
systems are not so
popular.
As soon as I typed this I realised that when computer
suites need
cooling, the system chosen is often circulating water
chillers.
So even where cooling/heating systems are needed, there is
room for
circulating water, seems to me.
Brian Whatcott Altus OK
Forced air also has some advantages. If your recirculating
water heating
system springs a leak, it's a mess, and may even damage
other systems.
If the forced air system leaks, then all it takes is a bit
of duct tape
to fix, if you want to bother. No need to bleed air out of
it either,
although that can also be avoided with a decent design in
the water circ
system.
--
Jim Richardson
http://www.eskimo.com/~warlock
Strip Mining Prevents Forest Fires.