The entire rear of my home has windows that go from the baseboard heater to door height. They are original to the home, single pane and not energy efficient.
The windows in the living room overlook my deck (a nice deck with a view that spans probably 60 or 75 miles).
I would like to replace those windows with a 12 foot slider. I guess it would be 4 doors or maybe three doors. It would allow the living room and the deck to become one in temperate weather.
But I would loose 12 feet of hot water baseboard heat.
I recently had my furnace serviced and I asked the mechanic what the work-around would be. He said that since I would have about 35 feet of baseboard in the room after I removed the 12 feet that it would be enough to keep the room warm. I have my doubts.
It is the ground floor of a ranch house. The house is heated with hot water baseboard heaters. The furnace is an oil burner.
There is easy access to add ducts directly into the floor.
The house has what was considered an "engineered" system with each run of radiator being metered by a valve ranging from "1" to "4". No one knows what those valve numbers mean anymore. It is possible that I can increase the heat in the room by removing the valve and putting in a more free flowing one, but all the contractors say, "It would be easier to put in a second zone."
What are my options?
The windows in the living room overlook my deck (a nice deck with a view that spans probably 60 or 75 miles).
I would like to replace those windows with a 12 foot slider. I guess it would be 4 doors or maybe three doors. It would allow the living room and the deck to become one in temperate weather.
But I would loose 12 feet of hot water baseboard heat.
I recently had my furnace serviced and I asked the mechanic what the work-around would be. He said that since I would have about 35 feet of baseboard in the room after I removed the 12 feet that it would be enough to keep the room warm. I have my doubts.
It is the ground floor of a ranch house. The house is heated with hot water baseboard heaters. The furnace is an oil burner.
There is easy access to add ducts directly into the floor.
The house has what was considered an "engineered" system with each run of radiator being metered by a valve ranging from "1" to "4". No one knows what those valve numbers mean anymore. It is possible that I can increase the heat in the room by removing the valve and putting in a more free flowing one, but all the contractors say, "It would be easier to put in a second zone."
What are my options?
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