PSDBowhunter
Lil-Rokslider
Couldn't find the answer to my question online and figured there were probably some HVAC pros on here.
Here's a little background first. I live in a house in Northcentral PA that was built in the mid 90's. It has an oil fired boiler with hot water baseboard as primary heat source. I also have an electric water heater the water goes to after it passes through the boiler. When I first moved in 3 years ago I bought a woodstove to put on the main floor. It is a high efficiency stove from Kuma that does a great job heating the house in the winter. My kids bedrooms are pretty far from it, so they get space heaters to help, but otherwise, the stove keeps up until it gets into single digits. The hot water baseboard normally get kicked on then (thermostat set at 67 in the winter).
In an effort to save on fuel oil, I turn the boiler off from about May until September. I figure there is no point in heating the hot water to have it there on standby. The woodstove will run you out of the house when it is 50 degrees out or warmer, so I normally just stick with the hot water baseboard during the spring and fall months where it is still mild.
My question is: should I turn off the boiler in the winter when I know the woodstove can keep up with my heating needs? I don't want to be wasting needless fuel oil, but I've heard its good to keep it on in the winter.
I really don't like hearing the boiler kick on and burn oil when I know there is no demand for hot water.
Here's a little background first. I live in a house in Northcentral PA that was built in the mid 90's. It has an oil fired boiler with hot water baseboard as primary heat source. I also have an electric water heater the water goes to after it passes through the boiler. When I first moved in 3 years ago I bought a woodstove to put on the main floor. It is a high efficiency stove from Kuma that does a great job heating the house in the winter. My kids bedrooms are pretty far from it, so they get space heaters to help, but otherwise, the stove keeps up until it gets into single digits. The hot water baseboard normally get kicked on then (thermostat set at 67 in the winter).
In an effort to save on fuel oil, I turn the boiler off from about May until September. I figure there is no point in heating the hot water to have it there on standby. The woodstove will run you out of the house when it is 50 degrees out or warmer, so I normally just stick with the hot water baseboard during the spring and fall months where it is still mild.
My question is: should I turn off the boiler in the winter when I know the woodstove can keep up with my heating needs? I don't want to be wasting needless fuel oil, but I've heard its good to keep it on in the winter.
I really don't like hearing the boiler kick on and burn oil when I know there is no demand for hot water.