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Baseboard Heating Installation

Baseboard heating installation can be an effective and affordable solution, either for the whole house or as a supplement in rooms were the main heating system is inefficient.

BASEBOARD HEATING INSTALLATION VS. FORCED AIR AND HYDRONIC BASEBAORD HEATING SYSTEMS

 

Baseboard heating installation offers several advantages over the average forced-air system. For one thing, baseboards operate virtually silent, in contrast to the noisy blowers of forced-air heating. Another advantage of baseboard heating installation is that it requires no ductwork. That means three things:

1. It’s relatively easy to install, particularly in older homes, where adding ducts can be so problematic.
2. Forced-air heating ducts should be serviced regularly, there’s little ongoing maintenance to do with baseboard heating installation.
3. Many homeowners like how baseboard heat comes out evenly.

 

ELECTRIC

 

Technically speaking, electricity plays a role in all baseboard heating installation systems, and there are some that run exclusively on electricity. You can put these in every room of the house if you want. It’s far more customary for an electric baseboard to provide supplemental heat for individual rooms on an as-needed basis. One common usage is for baseboard heat to run in a bedroom overnight, while the whole-house heating system can be put on a budget-friendly low setting.

Did you ever wonder why baseboard heating installation systems typically appear beneath windows? The answer is science. Baseboard heating installation works through convection. As cold air falls from the window, it enters the baseboard heating installation through a vent. The air is warmed by a series of metal fins that have been heated through electricity. The warm air then rises from the baseboard heating installation. This pattern repeats itself, creating a circular flow known as convection current.

The best baseboard heating installation systems are hardwired into the circuity of a home (with 120-volt or 240-volt supplies, either of which calls for the installation services of a licensed and experienced electrician). Some electric baseboard heating installation systems feature an integrated thermostat; others are set by an in-wall controller.

Though inexpensive to purchase, electric baseboard heating installation systems are somewhat infamously inefficient, meaning they can be costly to run for any prolonged period of time. It’s for this reason more than any other that homeowners typically choose not to rely on electric baseboard heating units as full-time solutions for the whole house.

 

HYDRONIC BASEBOARD HEATING

 

In a hydronic baseboard unit, the mechanics are similar but slightly different. Electricity still generates the system’s heat, but it does so indirectly. First, the electrical current warms up an enclosed fluid, either oil or water, and then that fluid radiates heat into the room where the unit has been installed.

Hydronic baseboard heating systems operate more efficiently than do electric units, because once the fluid has been warmed, it takes longer to cool down (the metal fins in an electrical baseboard cool down very quickly). That’s why if you come across a home in which baseboard heat is the one and only system of delivering heat, chances are high that it’s a more cost effective hydronic system.

What are the cons? In a whole-house hydronic system reliant on water circulated from the water heater, the lines can be disturbed by an intrusion of air. There’s an easy fix: bleeding the pipes. Compared with electric baseboards, hydronic units take longer to heat up. The efficiency of hydronic baseboards amply makes up for their slow start for most homeowners’.

If you need to heat your house for a fraction of the calendar year or if on occasion you want to make one or two rooms more comfortable and cozy, electric or hydronic baseboard heating installation systems may be the perfect solution.

Virginia Darragh | Wire Wiz Electrician Services | Signature
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