by MarkJames » Tue 25 Dec 2007, 22:45:13
I own a heating fuels sales, service and installation company in Upsate New York. Most of our customers in areas where natural gas isn't available have oil fired hydronic heating systems. Fuel oil has 140,000 BTUs per gallon in comparison to Propane @ 91,000 BTUs per gallon, you can store up to 660 gallons in your basement tanks, plus the quality and longevity of the furnaces, boilers and water heaters that burn fuel oil or kerosene is unmatched. It's not uncommon to see boilers well over 50 years old still in service. One of the most popular efficient setups is a three pass horizontal boiler such as a Buderus, Viessmann or Burnham with indirect water heater and outdoor reset control. The Energy Kinetics System 2000 series oil fired boilers are popular as well. They don't make many gas fired furnaces in the same league with a Thermopride oil fired furnace.
With oil fired furnaces, boilers and water heaters you can also choose the burner and control package, so you generally have the choice of a Beckett, Carlin or Riello burner with most modern oil fired equipment. The parts like transformers, igniters, primary controls, burner motors, oil pumps and cad cells are interchangeable on many Beckett, Carlin, Wayne and other older burners which makes stocking parts and emergency service much easier. Since burners and controls are seperate from the boiler or furnace, you can also install modern retrofit burners with oil solenoid vales, and primary controls with pre-purge, post-purge options on older equipment. This also comes in handy when doing emergency service.
With fuel oil, kerosene and propane you can choose to install more, or larger tanks and fill them when the prices are lower off season. Many companies offer pre-buy and price capped fuel sales as well. The efficiency of modern oil burning equipment is excellent. Gas fired equipment has a higher AFUE rating, but AFUE isn't an accurate measure of hydronic systems that also produce domestic hot water and the gains in efficiency are offset by the lower BTU value of the gas. Fuel oil and Kerosene are also very safe fuels. You'll rarely hear of a fuel oil explosion, or someone getting CO poisoning from an oil fired system. Since oil fired systems are generally serviced every year, they tend to be well maintained. Gas customers generally don't call for service until their system stops working, they smell gas or their CO detectors have gone off.
There are many full service, COD and mom and pop oil companies in the Northeast, so you can shop for either price, minimum delivery, service, emergency service, installations, service contracts etc. If you're a will-call customer that has run out of fuel you can always pick up some kerosene or diesel to get by until you can schedule a fuel delivery.