Not at all delighted with my ventless gas heater

Not at all delighted with my ventless gas heater

My ranch house is over a hundred ten years old as well as not outfitted with any modern or conventional ductwork at all.

This makes temperature control a large challenge… I reside in the northern end of the country, the extreme cold weather necessitates maintaining a powerful furnace.

The two of us make do the best the people I was with and I can. In the sunken living room, the people I was with and I rely on a ventless, natural gas area heater. Because the oil furnace doesn’t have vents, it creates a clear oily residue on the windows in the living room. I have a pair of antique French doors that separate the living room from the family room. Each of these doors has sixteen small windows. Cleaning all these windows is a labor-intensive, time-consuming as well as frustrating process. I’ve found that the windows rarely need to be washed during the summer. In the winter months, they are consistently cloudy as well as require a thorough scrubbing. The oil furnace is just a single-stage unit, which means that it can only operate at 1 speed. When the temp in the living room drops, the oil furnace blasts at maximum capacity unit it reaches the temperature control upper setting. Then the oil furnace shuts down and then cools down the inner entirely workings with a fan that blows cold air. The repeated cycling of on and off causes unpleasant temperature fluctuations. The ventless oil furnace is entirely weak and sensitive to dust. The filters need to be washed at least once a week. If there is any significant debris clogging the air filters, a blinking yellow warning light comes out. When the warning light starts to flash, the oil furnace will no longer automatically shut on as well as off. It keeps blasting at high speed as well as I worry that it might start to overheat or become a fire hazard.

 

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