Pipe coverings are made in sections about 3 feet in length and from 1 to 13⁄8 inches in thickness. The sections are usually cut in halves lengthwise to permit being put in place. The sections are covered with common muslin to keep the material in place and sometimes are painted after being installed. Painting has nothing to do with their insulating capabilities, but it preserves the cloth and makes a neat appearance. The sections when put in place are secured by pasting one of the loose edges of the cloth to the surface. The ends of the sections are bound together with strips of metal. Fig. 31 shows the appearance of the pipe when the covering is in place.
Fig. 31.—Pipe covering.
Irregular surfaces like the body of the furnace, pipe connections, etc., are insulated by coverings made from a plaster that is made expressly for such work. It is known as asbestus plaster. The plaster may be purchased in bulk and put in place with a trowel. As it is found in the market the plaster requires only the addition of water to put into working form.
The value of a pipe covering is not in proportion to its thickness. Experiments with pipe coverings have shown that a thickness of 13⁄8 inches will reduce the radiation 90 per cent., but doubling the thickness reduces the loss only 5 per cent. It, therefore, does not pay to make a covering more than 13⁄8 inches thick.
Vapor-system Heating.
—This system of heating is not greatly different from the steam plants already described but it is operated under conditions which do not permit the steam in the boiler to rise beyond a few ounces of pressure. Since the plant is intended to work at a pressure that is scarcely indicated by an ordinary steam gage, it has been termed a vapor system to distinguish it from the pressure systems which employ steam, up to 5 pounds or more to the square inch. The heat is transmitted to the radiators in the same manner as in the pressure systems. The heat of vaporization of steam is somewhat greater at the boiling point of water than at higher pressures, and the lack of pressure, therefore, increases its heating capacity. This is shown in the table, properties of steam, on [page 3]. The successful operation of such a plant rests in the delivery of the vapor to the radiators at only the slightest pressure and the return of the condensate to the boiler without noise or obstruction to the circulation at the same time ejecting the contained air.
The excellence of the system depends in the greatest measure on good design and the employment of special facilities that allow all water to be discharged from the radiators and returned to the boiler without accumulation at any part of the circulating system. It requires, further, the discharge of the air from the system at atmospheric pressure. The system is, therefore, practically pressureless.
Various systems of vapor heating are sold under the names of their manufacturers. Each possesses special appliances for producing positive circulation that are advocated as features of particular excellence. The vapor system of heating has met with a great deal of favor as a more nearly universal form of heating than either the pressure-steam plant or the hot-water method of heating.
Fig. 31a is a diagram illustrating the C. A. Dunham system of vapor heating. It will be noticed that there are no air vents on the radiators. The air from the radiators is ejected through a special form of trap that is indicated in the drawing. These traps permit the water and air to pass from the radiators but close against the slightly higher temperature of the vapor. This assures the condensation of the vapor in the radiators and excludes it from the return pipes. The water returns to the boiler in much the same manner as in the pressure systems already described but the air escapes through the air eliminator as indicated in the drawing. The system is, therefore, under atmospheric pressure at this point and only a slight amount greater in the boiler.