Greeting's all,
Question , I have a old hot water boiler system with free standing cast iron radiators and cast iron base board radiators. The free standing radiators date back to before WWII and the base board radiators in the early 50's.
There is a about a 6' to 7' raise to the tallest radiator and with 2" dual black pipe delivery there is more water in the pipes than in the boiler. The boiler is ~ 20 years old (steel) and still in very good shape.
Two weeks ago I had to replace the plumbing to the tank-less heater to find the the tempering valve and had no more insides , it had corroded away , well after replacing the pipes and flushing the tank-less heater. I have better , hotter water than I ever had before because I did not use a tempering valve to mix cold water.
I am running the boiler @ low temp 130° to 150° . Of course after doing this I found the the fill valve (about 60+ years old ) , the regulator was stuck closed so after fiddling with it got unstuck , would set eh regulator to 10 psi , but over night it would creep up to 15 psi, so I would back off the adjustment drain a little off to get the system to 10psi and it would still creep up to 15#'s. So I shut off the fill valve , drain off more to get the pressure to 10# and the it held and is still holding ( I was concerned that the tank-less heater core was leaky , But thank you Jesus it was not.
So I got a caleffi regulator with attached back-flow valve 573009A
http://www.caleffi.us/en_US/Technical_brochures/01061/01061.pdf
My question is I want to keep the pressure low enough to be able to bleed the radiators ( I figure around 8 psi for the raise I need). But can I install this valve on the same pipe that feeds into the boiler (about 12" out from the boiler). this would be the easiest access to this . The valve is rated to work up to 150° f , But am I better off going more down stream to keep it cooler ?
I want to keep the pressure low because of the old pipes and some of the pipes are rusted , none are leaking and I would like to keep it that way.
Thank you , Guys !
Question , I have a old hot water boiler system with free standing cast iron radiators and cast iron base board radiators. The free standing radiators date back to before WWII and the base board radiators in the early 50's.
There is a about a 6' to 7' raise to the tallest radiator and with 2" dual black pipe delivery there is more water in the pipes than in the boiler. The boiler is ~ 20 years old (steel) and still in very good shape.
Two weeks ago I had to replace the plumbing to the tank-less heater to find the the tempering valve and had no more insides , it had corroded away , well after replacing the pipes and flushing the tank-less heater. I have better , hotter water than I ever had before because I did not use a tempering valve to mix cold water.
I am running the boiler @ low temp 130° to 150° . Of course after doing this I found the the fill valve (about 60+ years old ) , the regulator was stuck closed so after fiddling with it got unstuck , would set eh regulator to 10 psi , but over night it would creep up to 15 psi, so I would back off the adjustment drain a little off to get the system to 10psi and it would still creep up to 15#'s. So I shut off the fill valve , drain off more to get the pressure to 10# and the it held and is still holding ( I was concerned that the tank-less heater core was leaky , But thank you Jesus it was not.
So I got a caleffi regulator with attached back-flow valve 573009A
http://www.caleffi.us/en_US/Technical_brochures/01061/01061.pdf
My question is I want to keep the pressure low enough to be able to bleed the radiators ( I figure around 8 psi for the raise I need). But can I install this valve on the same pipe that feeds into the boiler (about 12" out from the boiler). this would be the easiest access to this . The valve is rated to work up to 150° f , But am I better off going more down stream to keep it cooler ?
I want to keep the pressure low because of the old pipes and some of the pipes are rusted , none are leaking and I would like to keep it that way.

Thank you , Guys !