Monday, December 10, 2012

Some Differences Found in Boilers


Boilers are used in residential homes to heat the water that the homeowners need for their cooking, cleaning, and bathing activities. All homes require heated water to use when the people are taking a bath. All of the homes need to have hot water so they can wash the dishes they eat from, wash the clothes that they wear, and clean the surfaces within the house. These are important pieces of equipment that almost every home and business has in them.

Boilers are not all the same though. The sizes of these appliances can vary quite dramatically. There are some of them that are designed to hold the water in a holding tank, heated to a temperature that the owner likes, until the time that a faucet is engaged to draw the heated liquid from the tank. There are some of them that are designed to have cold water from the main line enter them and the hot water is not created until the faucet is engaged. This hot water on demand devices has no holding tanks and they provide the family with more heated water without a waiting period.

Boilers are powered by a fuel source. Not all boilers use the same fuel source to function. Some of the units will be fueled by gas that comes in from the mains pipes. The areas that have this type of gas supply are usually in large towns, cities, are at the least, densely populated regions. In areas that are less populated the gas that is used to fuel these devices will likely be propane. At one time butane was also a popular gas for these items to work off of, but butane is rarely used anymore.

Wood has been used for many years to provide a source of fuel for some of these types of appliances. Wood was once easy for people who lived in rural areas to get at little or no charge. If you lived in a town or a city then wood was not a good choice of fuel because it was harder to come by and therefore more expensive to use.

Heating oil was once extremely popular with people residing in heavily populated regions and people living in rural areas alike. Heating oil became less popular as the price of this fuel went skyrocketing. The price of mains gas is far less than the price of heating oil so people in towns that have mains gas changed their equipment and their fuel preferences. People in rural areas used heating oil for a longer period of time and then they also switched to devices that used cheaper fuels to power them.

Coal was actually used as a fuel source for some units, but coal is messy, requires a large storage area, and it is time consuming to have to go feed the furnace the coal. Most residences did not have coal burning furnaces because of these inconveniences.

Many people do use electricity as a source of fuel for these appliances. Electricity is more efficient than some fuels and cost more than some of them as well.

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