My New Boiler is now smaller than my Dryer!

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I dare you to get on a plane and fly here this weekend!!

Robert's mother is here visiting this weekend!  You could finally meet Joyce!

 

((Now I'm gonna get slapped!))

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The Truth Revealed

After all the hubbub at bidding time, I guess Laundress won't be the first to come and visit the Charcoal set.
 
And yet, still at that age in deep competition with his Mom

Laughed so hard I passed gas.

 

So glad you got the Charcoals, Jon Charles, although I've forgotten the story, but remember that it was a good one and exciting. In the mood to re-tell it?
 
Oh Jon! What a beautiful set! I forgot about these. Glad they went to a good home. Congrats!

p.s. the boiler is nice too... (:

p.s.s. Robert, that is a REALLY cute picture of you and your Mother! Hope you have a wonderful visit with her.
 
they were very low use machines

She probably did "undies on Sundays" with them which is part of the reason they are in such good shape. The other part was she smoked like a chimney, the entire house was coated in tar and nicotine which actually saved the chrome.

Here's a close up shot after I removed the coating.

 

You can see the build up between the prongs of the crown, thats how covered the machines were.

 

 

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Charcoal in your xmas stocking?

So glad you got these Jon!

I was waiting for the day they would appear on these pages and it took longer than I thought but you were probably waiting to reveal once you got the rinse switch working again, right? LOL

I think of all the Frigidaire's out there, this must be one of the most beautifully preserved sets anyone has seen in a long time. Can't wait to see interior shots.

Again - Congratulations.

Patrick
 
Oh Jon... very clever!

 

 

Honestly I guess I haven't been paying close enough attention to who has what in their collection, I didn't know if those were new or existing.   Obviously they are new!

 

CONGRATULATIONS!!!!!!   Those are incredible!

 

Kevin
 
Two zones? With one steam boiler? Do tell! I have only seen it once in the local church where I was brainwashed--er, I mean spent a lot of time. There was a motorized vale for each zone that was controlled by a low-voltage thermostat.But it has been decades since I have seen the mechanicals.

In my Cape-Cod style house of 1.5 stories (storys => UK) I added a loop of hydronic (hot-water) baseboard heating to the basement. This is possible because the bottom of the boiler and the floor level of the heated space was the same. The upper story-and-a-half remained steam heat.

The circulator (small pump) needs to pull water out of the bottom of the boiler, run it through the "radiators" (actually baseboard-style convectors) and return it about one foot (30cm) up. The circulator was designed for an "open-loop" system. Meaning it was designed to be used with oxygenated water. In a closed system (your typical hydronic heating systems) the oxygen is eventually depleted and bled out of the system. A one-pipe steam system is actually an open-to-air system that remains with oxygenated water. [a circulator/pump designed for an oxygen-free closed system, and used in oxygenated water, will deteriorate, rust and die prematurely).

Normally, in a "closed" (i.e. airtight) hydronic system the returning water is pumped back into the boiler by the circulator. The hottest water is taken from the top and pumped apound the heating (radiator) loop(s).
 
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