HVAC/Plumbing PRODUCTS

Magnetic centrifugal chiller

Heat-sinking device

Design videos

Destratification fans

Drain adapter

High-efficiency boilers

Controllers and software

Cased air coil for geothermal systems

High-volume/low-speed fan

Large-volume fan

more >

HVAC/Plumbing products RSS feed

CPVC adapters

CPVC brass adapter fittings have a molded CPVC end piece with a socket-weld connection and forged brass tailpiece. The tailpiece has an internal knurl and EPDM O-ring. The overmolded, one-piece fitting eliminates a union tailpiece connection and possible leak path. Pressure rated to 100 psi at 180 F or 150 psi at 100 F, the adapters are UPC and NSF-61 approved. The fittings are available in 1/2-inch to 2-inch diameters with male and female connections.

Matco-Norca, Brewster, NY
website    free information

HVAC/Plumbing ARTICLES

Students Get Into Hot Water At School

The ABCs Of Saving Natural Gas

Millwork Gets The All-Star Treatment

HVAC From The Top Down

Schools Do The Math On Energy

Clean-Up Was Too Tough For Housekeeping

Boilers Bloom At Garden Apartments

Ductless HVAC Cools An Arkansas Hotel

Keeping Clean In Healthcare Facilities

Clean Up Indoor Air Quality

more >

Students Get Into Hot Water At School

Electric tankless water heaters pass the test in Indiana school restrooms.


An electric tankless water heater in a school's boys' restroom also accommodates the hot water needs of the girls' restroom on the other side of the wall.

When Indiana Math and Science Academy, Indianapolis, was renovating a school building, its goals were to save costs on maintenance, operations, and installation. Facility management sought a water-heating system that could conserve water and be maintenance free. A problem, though, was that the new restrooms were located far from the mechanical room. The solution was to use one electric tankless water heater to handle all of the hot water needed for two restrooms.

The water heater, set at 8.5 W, was placed under the sink in the boys' restroom. The unit also serves the girls' restroom on the other side of the wall. This placement, with a short piping run, conserves water. Only one cold-water-system pipe is needed to run the unit. The coilless water-heating technology eliminates the need for periodic maintenance calls, regardless of water quality, according to the manufacturer. John Ayetekin, the schoolmaster and general manager of the academy, said the unit should reduce or eliminate maintenance costs.

The school used a point-of-use electric tankless hot water heater with coilless technology made by American Hometec, Wilmington, DE. Another AHM-C10 heater, set at 4.3 W, was installed under a sink in a health room.

read complete article


Warning: mysql_num_rows(): supplied argument is not a valid MySQL result resource in /home/cbpmag/public_html/rightcolumnp.inc on line 14

ADVERTISE HERE