There's plenty of options when it comes to heating options for your home. Here's how forced air, hot water and steam systems work, and whether they'd be good for your home.
July 27, 2015
There's plenty of options when it comes to heating options for your home. Here's how forced air, hot water and steam systems work, and whether they'd be good for your home.
A furnace heats air that is then blown through large sheet-metal supply ducts into individual rooms through warm-air registers. At cold-air registers, return ducts draw cool air from the rooms and carry it back to the furnace. There, the air passes through a filter before getting heated and blown back into the rooms.
A boiler heats water and a pump circulates it through pipes to radiators or convectors and back to the boiler. Under the cover, you'll find a straight copper pipe surrounded by copper fins. An expansion tank provides an air cushion that lets the hot water expand safely.
A boiler heats water until it vaporizes and rises through pipes into radiators. After the steam hits the metal walls of the radiators, it condenses and runs back to the boiler. A steam system is not closed, like a hot water system, so water needs to be added to the boiler from time to time.
Getting the right heating system for your house can be tricky. Each of the systems have disctinct advantages and improvements that can be made. Depending on your schedule and budget, one of these systems may be the perfect fit for you and your home.
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