ECN Forum
Posted By: rknikko How to calculate gas boiler HP? - 01/06/05 12:20 AM
Do anyone know how to calculate the horsepower for a gas boiler (water)? What is the average HP run in a 2-family residential boiler?
Posted By: CTwireman Re: How to calculate gas boiler HP? - 01/06/05 12:23 PM
Boilers are commonly rated in BTU's, not horsepower.

You are kind of scaring me with that question.

[This message has been edited by CTwireman (edited 01-06-2005).]
Posted By: Cobtronics Re: How to calculate gas boiler HP? - 01/07/05 05:55 PM
This site http://www.onlineconversion.com
offers all manner of conversions. A boiler BTU rating is actually BTU/Hr. So, 1 Btu/hour [I.T.] = 0.0003929 horsepower [electric]. Or, 1 Btu/hour [I.T.] = 0.0003985 cheval vapeur for the rest of us. [Linked Image]
Posted By: condenseddave Re: How to calculate gas boiler HP? - 01/09/05 08:34 PM
Large Steam boilers are generally rated in horsepower. Water boilers have several different btuh ratings, the input, the output, and the most important, "I=B=R" rating (Or "DOE" rating).

The only way to properly size the (Hot water) boiler is to perform a heat loss calc on the house, which takes into account the windows, doors, insulation, etc. and size the radiation to this, then size the boiler to the connected radiation.

The only way to properly size a replacement steam boiler is to size the boiler to the connected radiation, plus a suitable "pickup factor". (Usually about 30%)

To actually answer the original question, ( [Linked Image] ) one boiler horsepower=33,479 btuh.So a 100,000 btuh steam boier could be called a "3 HP boiler". Mostly, though, boilers of this size aren't referred to in "HP", but btuh. You start seeing horsepower used as a descriptive term for boilers when they hit the million btu mark. (A one million btuh boier, would, of course, be a "30 HP" boiler.
www.heatinghelp.com (The "Wall" forum) is the premier place to learn about boilers and heating with water and steam, in general.

Good luck.



[This message has been edited by condenseddave (edited 01-09-2005).]
© ECN Electrical Forums