- Joined
- 27 Jan 2008
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- 23,697
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- Location
- Llanfair Caereinion, Nr Welshpool
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I have seen one pipe heating, it carried steam which was allowed to turn into water and run into a drain away, but this is hardly standard practice. In the main you have a pipe taking hot water into a radiator and out of a radiator does not matter if the radiators are in series of parallel, however with the series method there needs to be a bypass so radiator can be turned off without turning off all radiators, with series the return water is rather hot, which means you can't extract as much heat from the fuel being burnt.
The small Myson does have a large heat output, it must be somewhere around the 6kW mark, it has two controls a thermostat which turns fan off and on and a speed control for the fan, and on the output pipe a thermal switch to turn it off once the water becomes cold.
Theory is good, practice not so good, watching TV at night and the Myson cuts in and you realise how noisy they are, and although they heat the room quickly once they turn off the room cools again quickly as well, there is no mass of hot water slowly cooling, it's on or off very like an inferred heater. With the lock shield valves wide open on a 10 mm micro bore system there is quite a large fall in water temperature in and out of a Myson far more then the largest radiator I have in the house. Boiler on and within 5 minutes the Myson is blowing and boiler off and within 5 minutes it has stopped. But where the Myson thermostat cuts in the return water temperature has a massive change in temperature. When Myson is not blowing the return water is rather hot.
I am sure today the Myson has a whole different way to control the water flow? I am sure there is a solenoid which as soon as the fan stops restricts the water flow so hot water does not return to boiler as quickly as the old model I have. But mine was bought in 1980 well before we had condensate boilers as the norm.
The small Myson does have a large heat output, it must be somewhere around the 6kW mark, it has two controls a thermostat which turns fan off and on and a speed control for the fan, and on the output pipe a thermal switch to turn it off once the water becomes cold.
Theory is good, practice not so good, watching TV at night and the Myson cuts in and you realise how noisy they are, and although they heat the room quickly once they turn off the room cools again quickly as well, there is no mass of hot water slowly cooling, it's on or off very like an inferred heater. With the lock shield valves wide open on a 10 mm micro bore system there is quite a large fall in water temperature in and out of a Myson far more then the largest radiator I have in the house. Boiler on and within 5 minutes the Myson is blowing and boiler off and within 5 minutes it has stopped. But where the Myson thermostat cuts in the return water temperature has a massive change in temperature. When Myson is not blowing the return water is rather hot.
I am sure today the Myson has a whole different way to control the water flow? I am sure there is a solenoid which as soon as the fan stops restricts the water flow so hot water does not return to boiler as quickly as the old model I have. But mine was bought in 1980 well before we had condensate boilers as the norm.