Question:

House heating problem?

Well we have house heating problem, and we dont know whats wrongWe build our house for 3 years now and now when we are finishing up we have installed furnace, boiler and aliuminium radiatorsThe problem is that while the system is tested and works( furnace generates heat, boiler boils water and we can use it in sinks and shower and radiators are as hot as hell), but for some reason inside of house isnt geeting any warmerYou can keep system up for whole day and there is no reasonable effect on the temperature of rooms.We dont know what is wrong or what to do so it is bothering us a lot as we would like like to finally move in soonIf anyone have any knowledge about things liek this please share your opinion on how to fix this problemIF you need specs of furnace and other stuff i will share as much as i can possibly remember.

Answer:

OKI am confused hereYou are using a 300watt MONO amp for your highs? One thingthat's just wrong! Stereo sound was invented in the middle of last century for a reason, dude! Trade one of your buddies for a small two or four channel, please! You need to at least run an additional 4ga rca to your Autotek (sweet amp too)A 120amp fuse in an 8ga wire doesnt do anythingThe wire has about as good of a chance of catching on fire before the fuse blowsMax for an 8ga should be about 60ampsUse that 120a for your 4ga, put aprox 40a fuse on your 8ga to a DIFFERENT highs ampNext, take some more of that 4ga, and upgrade your charging wire from the rear of the alternator directly to the positive terminal on the batteryAlso get some black 4ga and upgrade the engine ground from somewhere on the engine (preferably near the alternator) to the chassis of the carUpgrade the battery ground to chassis wire as well If you still have draw issues get a small red-top stinger battery, and install it in-line (4ga or better) near the amplifiers in the backMake sure you install 2 more fuses off of the battery in the trunk to avoid fire hazzardOne on the positive lead toward the front battery, and one on the positive lead toward the amplifierIf that doesn't do it, then worry about your alternatorGround the battery in the rear with at least a 4ga (and as short as possible)I have had horrible luck with aftermarket alternatorsThis remedy works nearly every time - with much bigger systems than that evenYou have a nice start thoughGood Luck!
The skipping makes it sound like the mounting of your CD player has jarred loose over timeMight want to pull out the CD player and reinstallRed-tops are good batteries, that should kick way more than enough power for your system, even if you ran everything at onceA power problem theoretically wouldn't make the CD player skip, it would restart or simply shut itself offAlso, if your system is managing to pound your CD player off track, it's probably drawing power well enoughIn my experience, a problem with the alternator causing electrical problems with the sound system usually shows up as bizarre sounds when the system is turned on but not playing anythingTry driving your car for a bit on town roads (not on the freeway, where even a dying alternator will produce a bit of charge), with the sound system up and the CD player on pause or muteIf it sounds like your car is trying to speak a bizarre robot language at you, it means your alternator is causing problemsWhat speakers have you got in your system- particularly, what's your subwoofer? Try rolling the ohms down to 4, and turning your CD player up at the volume dialIncreasing the output volume on the device creating the signal and decreasing the output at the amplifier is generally good practice for maintaining a high quality of sound anyway, so it certainly couldn't hurtI can't really give good advice unless I know exactly what's hooked up to your system, but there are some places to startRock on brother.
not a bad systemI think whats happening is your drawing more power than your alternator can put out and your battery goes dead because the alternator cant keep up with your system and charging your battery at the same timeI dont think your battery went badAs far as your serpentine belt on your motor I doubt its slipping because of the tensioning wheel is keeping constant pressure on itI think a HO alternator is in order for your system congratulations you made it to the next level.
Ok so a silly question is did you insulate the house (walls and attic)? Do you have single or double pane windows? Did you seal around the windows and doors with spray foam so there are no air leaks (in and out)? Do you have very high ceilings in the rooms? This last point is important as heat rises from the rads goes to the ceiling and will take some time to come down to the lower level of the roomsCeiling fans blowing downward would help with this problem but it still would take time to properly heat the roomsWithout specs for the rooms and what you built it is hard to say what the reason would be especially if the rads are hot and functioning properlyIt sounds as if you have severe heat loss for some reason and normally this is due to poor insulation in the attic and walls.
your alt may just be to small to keep up,but you may also have a bad connection to your battery or the power wire,my be lose to you alt,or you may have a bad ground to you capacitor

Share to: