Boiler stove

from Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Boiler stoves are usually intended primarily for heating water. All of the water to be heated is located in a boiler that is part of the fireplace.

The boiler vessel is located directly in the combustion chamber and / or the heating gas path and is surrounded by heating gas on all sides. In accordance with the technical rules of the furnace and air heating construction trade (TR-OL), boiler stoves are built individually and by hand on site (stationary), i.e. not in series. They are fired with solid fuel . The outer surfaces usually consist of stove tiles or other heat-storing material. If the outer surfaces are metallic, they must have two layers.

See also

Water ship (vessel)

Individual evidence

  1. Herrmann, Michael, German Institute for Standardization: Stoves and chimneys: plan and build space heating systems properly . 7., completely revised. Ed. Beuth, Berlin [u. a.] 2011, ISBN 978-3-410-21307-9 , pp. 252 .
  2. TR-OL. Retrieved June 25, 2018 .