BronYrAur
Mechanical
- Nov 2, 2005
- 799
I am trying to determine the heat lost from a boiler into the boiler room. I want to make sure I have proper ventilation in the summertime.
I have gone back-and-forth with my vendor and received a calculation sheet, but most of it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. See attached. The rep told me that the important value is the difference between the "Combustion Efficiency" and the "Fuel to Output Efficiency". So in my example of a Burnham 3P-200-G boiler, the difference is 82.629% - 80.217% at the pressure, ambient temperature listed, etc., which is 2.412%.
So, does that mean that 2.412% of my input BTUH (which is 8,346,131 BTUH) is rejected into the boiler room? So approximately 200,000 BTUH needs to be accounted for as I ventilate the room, correct?
Thanks for your help.
I have gone back-and-forth with my vendor and received a calculation sheet, but most of it doesn't make a whole lot of sense. See attached. The rep told me that the important value is the difference between the "Combustion Efficiency" and the "Fuel to Output Efficiency". So in my example of a Burnham 3P-200-G boiler, the difference is 82.629% - 80.217% at the pressure, ambient temperature listed, etc., which is 2.412%.
So, does that mean that 2.412% of my input BTUH (which is 8,346,131 BTUH) is rejected into the boiler room? So approximately 200,000 BTUH needs to be accounted for as I ventilate the room, correct?
Thanks for your help.