I'm redoing the walls in the basement and the baseboard heater is becoming an problem. I originall thought I could just move it away from the wall and work behind it but it's becoming hard to work with and today I stumbled upon this issue where if I want to remove the old boards I'm going to have to remove the pipes as well.
What's the best way to do this, is there constantly water in these pipes or are they empty if the heat is off? I traced them back to the furnace and it appears to be that one pipe goes out controlled by the thermostat(duh) and another is the return pipe that comes back to the furnace attached to the furnace which also appears to have a spout attached which I can only assume is for draining it. Could I just attach a hose to this, open it up and drain the pipes? Is there a set amount of water that is stored in this system so when it comes time to put it back I know how much to put in?
What's the best way to do this, is there constantly water in these pipes or are they empty if the heat is off? I traced them back to the furnace and it appears to be that one pipe goes out controlled by the thermostat(duh) and another is the return pipe that comes back to the furnace attached to the furnace which also appears to have a spout attached which I can only assume is for draining it. Could I just attach a hose to this, open it up and drain the pipes? Is there a set amount of water that is stored in this system so when it comes time to put it back I know how much to put in?
Attachments
-
71.5 KB Views: 601
-
66.2 KB Views: 515
-
99.1 KB Views: 2,043
-
99.8 KB Views: 282