Furnance Question

   / Furnance Question #1  

GBeck

Silver Member
Joined
Jul 15, 2008
Messages
113
Tractor
Kubota
I have an old oil fired furnace in the workshop that was there when I moved in. It has no oil storage tank, I was wondering if you can just get the 50 gallon drums of oil hooked up to this somehow rather then having to pay the delivery guy who fills up the house tank. The furnace would only be used maybe once or twice a week on the coldest days to basically just get the chill out of the air working out there. Not sure the make or model of the furnace but I could post a pic if needed.
 
   / Furnance Question #2  
I have an old oil fired furnace in the workshop that was there when I moved in. It has no oil storage tank, I was wondering if you can just get the 50 gallon drums of oil hooked up to this somehow rather then having to pay the delivery guy who fills up the house tank. The furnace would only be used maybe once or twice a week on the coldest days to basically just get the chill out of the air working out there. Not sure the make or model of the furnace but I could post a pic if needed.
Aren't you going have to pay him for the 50 gallons no matter where where he puts it, be it in the house tank or in the drum?
I'm begining to think I don't quite stand under what you mean here !:confused::D
 
   / Furnance Question
  • Thread Starter
#3  
I can just pick up one of the drums from the station in town and just keep swapping them out as I need it.
Currently for my house, I have a (I think) an 800 gallon tank, that just gets filled every month whether I need or not. So basically I pay 200 per month, and one of those months I pay them the difference, or get a credit (hasn't happened yet).
so this other furnace is just out in the workshop, and will just be used periodically, and around here for heating oil, the 50 gallon drum is the only thing I have been able to find that I can just pick up myself and not have to get delivery for.
bottom line is I don't know how it works, just on suction, or is there a pump, etc, etc to get the oil into the furnace
 
   / Furnance Question
  • Thread Starter
#4  
and yes...I have been confused before :confused::D
 
   / Furnance Question #5  
I have an old oil fired furnace in the workshop that was there when I moved in. It has no oil storage tank, I was wondering if you can just get the 50 gallon drums of oil hooked up to this somehow rather then having to pay the delivery guy who fills up the house tank. The furnace would only be used maybe once or twice a week on the coldest days to basically just get the chill out of the air working out there. Not sure the make or model of the furnace but I could post a pic if needed.

Is there really a price difference between the delivered fuel and the 50 gallon drum?

I have an oil furnace, and I've never had to pay any kind of delivery charge.
 
   / Furnance Question #6  
I would guess there is a fuel pump of some sort on the furnace to get the fuel and an injector pump to spray fuel for flame.
 
   / Furnance Question #7  
Sounds like you do not want to mix the billing with the house and shop.You will know how much you use for your play time.You probably just put the intake tube into the drum . (some also have a return line) The problem i see is bleeding the line every time you change the drum.You could siphen from a 2'nd drum. Number 2 Off road or on road (taxed) disel (about 2.60 gal) will will be the same as the house fuel. I heated a insulated 30x50 with a 80,000 oil furnace it was great because at the spure of a moment i could be at 70 degrees.I used a down flow furnace that was elivated 16 inches in a room next to the shop.Then I sold the farm.
 
   / Furnance Question #8  
Is there really a price difference between the delivered fuel and the 50 gallon drum?

*I have an oil furnace, and I've never had to pay any kind of delivery charge.
I have 55 gallon of fuel delivered at a time for my tractor.
It cost me the same if i go there and pick it up;
So why bother?
*Do u use the fuel in your tractor also ?
You can u know as most likely the fuel oil and the diesel are exactly the same thing.
1 fuel with 2 different names.
 
   / Furnance Question #9  
I can just pick up one of the drums from the station in town and just keep swapping them out as I need it.
Currently for my house, I have a (I think) an 800 gallon tank, that just gets filled every month whether I need or not. So basically I pay 200 per month, and one of those months I pay them the difference, or get a credit (hasn't happened yet).
so this other furnace is just out in the workshop, and will just be used periodically, and around here for heating oil, the 50 gallon drum is the only thing I have been able to find that I can just pick up myself and not have to get delivery for.
bottom line is I don't know how it works, just on suction, or is there a pump, etc, etc to get the oil into the furnace
I would just have it all delivered and use it in the house in the workshop and in the tractor.
It is all the same fuel and will work in all 3 applications.
There is no way I would be chasing after and manhandling a 50 gallon drum of fuel when the stuff was already being delivered to me.


L . B .
 
   / Furnance Question #10  
bottom line is I don't know how it works, just on suction, or is there a pump, etc, etc to get the oil into the furnace

Not sure exactly, but most set ups have the line on the floor even under the floor so that tells me that most work by gravity, very rarely do I see one go overhead on the ceiling, and I do see alot of oil heating systems, being a contractor that's always in peoples basements.
Home depot has the legit 275 gal tanks pretty cheap I think, recently I've seen smaller tanks (look about half size) in a house, they were replacements and probably needed to be smaller due to clearance restraints getting them in the basement, the house was huge but had no hatchway.

You can see the small tanks in the corner of the picture they put three together so they had at least some capacity, they were probably replacing a 1,000 gal underground tank that would have been standard equipment when this house was built.
Look at the size of the house, must have to have them filled every couple of weeks in the middle of winter.
JB.
 

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