sparkync
Senior Member
- Location
- North Carolina
Julie, just checked with the gas company. They say 220 cf/hr ( which is what my spec's call for ) is not a problem. They just have to change the gas meter. Steve...
Ragin Cajun said:It's been 7 years since I installed it and I don't remember. When I get back to the office (and remember!) I will see if I can find the data.
At the very least, you need to get with a mechanical engineer who is familiar with the issues, that's what I did. 225CFM is a LOT of gas.
sparkync said:Julie, just checked with the gas company. They say 220 cf/hr ( which is what my spec's call for ) is not a problem. They just have to change the gas meter. Steve...
sparkync said:Julie, just checked with the gas company. They say 220 cf/hr ( which is what my spec's call for ) is not a problem. They just have to change the gas meter. Steve...
Ragin Cajun said:It's been 7 years since I installed it and I don't remember. When I get back to the office (and remember!) I will see if I can find the data.
At the very least, you need to get with a mechanical engineer who is familiar with the issues, that's what I did. 225CFM is a LOT of gas.
sparkync said:Rajin, just check with generator supplier. The solinoids and time delay are built into the unit I'm planning on getting. Thanks.. Steve.
sparkync said:I was told that there would be a bigger meter installed for the generator and a regulator installed for the furnace. Steve
kbsparky said:One way to include a water heater on a standby system is configure it for 120 Volts when operating on the generator. That way, you will be heating the water, but at a slower rate, saving valuable capacity for starting loads such the A/C, fridge, freezer, water pump, etc.
A simple DPDT relay can accomplish this task.
Don't forget, W = V^2/R, Since the resistance is constant, if you half the voltage, 1/4 the power. Now an inductive load, that's not a constant impedance. Lower the voltage and the current will increase until you burn it up.m73214 said:Are you saying that if you run 120V through a 240V element it will work at a slower rate but still heat the water? Wouldn't the amperage increase at the lower voltage?
Granted. But it doesn't change that much. Either way, less voltage, less heat! ;-) RCmhulbert said:But resistance is NOT constant with electric heat! As temp rises, so does ressistance.