Petro Home > Learn > Oil Heat > How Your Oil-Fired Heating System Works
Oil-fired heating systems distribute heat in one of three ways: warm air through vents, hot water through baseboards, or steam through radiators. Your thermostat senses that the room temperature has fallen below your thermostat setting and sends a signal to your heating system to provide heat for your home. When your oil burner is engaged, heating oil travels from the tank to the burner by way of a pump where it becomes a fine mist mixed with air. The fuel/air mixture is then injected into the burner where it is ignited in the combustion chamber. Heating System Types There are two main types of water-based systems: hot water systems and steam systems. Water is heated in either a cast iron or steel boiler before it is dispersed throughout your home. In a hot water system, the heated water is circulated through radiators or baseboards. In a steam system, the water turns to steam and rises through pipes to the radiators. In a warm air system, your furnace heats air. A blower then sends the heated air up through the ducts and out of vents in your floors or walls. The air gets drawn back to the furnace through a return duct and the cycle repeats. Finally, the emissions from the combustion of fuel and air exit the system through a flue pipe that runs out of your home through the chimney. |
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