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Home Energy Magazine Online January/February 1997
TRENDS
Fireplace Pilots Take Gas Use Sky High
The field trial found that consumer behavior was key
to energy savings with gas fireplaces. Fireplaces, such as this one, with
easy-to-reach pilot lights could significantly improve overall energy efficiency. |
In the past few years, sales of convenient, clean-burning
gas fireplaces have increased dramatically. There are several types of
gas fireplace available. While some are fairly efficient, others do not
come close to matching manufacturers' claims. In order to devise a test
procedure for the seasonal efficiency of gas fireplaces, we needed to find
out more about the gas use of pilot lights.
The average gas fireplace pilot uses about 21
ft3 (0.6 m3) of gas per day. In the past, manufacturers
have claimed that people turn off pilot lights between uses. If this were
the case, many gas fireplaces would be quite efficient. Some could significantly
reduce overall household gas use in houses with gas furnaces. On the other
hand, if the pilot is left on all year, it will use about 7.3 therms of
gas, making the overall efficiency of the fireplace much lower and increasing
gas consumption.
To get a sense of how the fireplaces were actually
used, we carried out a detailed field trial, closely monitoring 68 homes
with gas fireplaces and furnaces for an entire year. Data loggers digitally
measured and recorded furnace and fireplace gas consumption every 15 minutes,
and weather data every hour.
Once the logging was done, we analyzed the results.
We found that 16 of the gas fireplaces had insignificant use: they were
fired up fewer than six times per year. In the 52 homes with significant
use, 14 gas fireplaces either did not have a continuous pilot or had one
that was shut off daily during the heating season.
We also monitored pilot use in the summer. Of
the 38 homes where fireplace use was significant and the pilot light was
on continuously during the heating season, only 8 turned the pilot off
for the summer. In the 30 where the pilot light was on all year, the pilot
accounted for half (48%) of the total gas fireplace fuel consumption. On
average, these fireplaces used 31% as much gas as the homes' central gas
furnaces.
For the 14 homes where fireplace use was significant
but the pilot light was not left burning all the time, the average yearly
gas consumption was only 6.7 therms. This yearly consumption was lower
than pilot light consumption alone in the other 38 homes. These 14 fireplaces
used only 8% as much gas as their homes' central furnaces. In these homes,
fireplace use correlated closely with outside temperature. Fireplaces without
continuous pilots were far more effective than continuous-pilot units at
reducing overall house gas consumption.
The 16 homes in which the fireplace was almost
never used were particularly interesting. Only 5 of these homes shut their
pilot light off at all. For the other 11, the pilot was on continuously
for the entire year, using over 7 therms of gas for no household heat.
There are two options for efficient pilot light
operation in gas fireplaces. The first and most obvious is to buy a unit
that does not have a continuous pilot light, but rather some sort of intermittent
ignition, like those on all gas furnaces sold today. However, some fireplace
manufacturers are concerned about the safety and reliability of these devices,
in spite of their widespread use on other equipment. Many homeowners also
want to have the gas fireplace as a source of heat that is independent
of electricity in the event of a power failure, and a continuous pilot
light helps to meet that objective.
The second option, then, is to buy a unit with
a continuous pilot, but one on which the pilot light shutoff and relight
controls are easy to access and use. Turn off the pilot light whenever
the fireplace is not being used.
This research was conducted for the Canadian
Gas Association, which recently developed a seasonal efficiency test procedure
for gas fireplaces. This test measures fireplace performance under real-world
conditions. The report, Analysis of Gas Fireplace Usage from Real Homes,
is available from A.C.S. Hayden, Advanced Combustion Technologies, ETB/CETC,
580 Booth St., Ottawa, Ontario, Canada K1A 0E4. E-mail: skip.hayden@cc2smtp.nrcan.gc.ca.
A.C.S. "Skip" Hayden is a senior research
scientist at Advanced Combustion Technologies of CANMET in Ottawa, Canada.
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