Typical Pilot Light Fuel Consumption?
Want to make sure I got the estimate right:
Typical pilot is .018 orifice which burns 800BTU @ 3.5" gas pressure. 70 Therms per year to keep pilot lit. For those that have actually measured their Pilot Lights, is 800BTU/hr a typical measured result? |
That seems right. It's a little higher than the ~450btu/hr measured here (3.3 therms/month), but more or less ballpark.
http://physics.ucsd.edu/do-the-math/...ghts-are-evil/ |
I've gotten 4 therm gas bills for most summers. Oddly enough my pilot keeps the water hot enough for showers in the summer. Add a therm or so for cooking on the stove with no oven use in the summer(don't heat the house), and it comes to about 3 therms per month from the pilot light and I'm getting 3-5 min daily showers off that pilot too. I use a 1.25GPM showerhead and a flow valve, it provides a reasonable shower when turned to about 1GPM. Anything less and the water don't hold solid streams out of the head. So it keeps up to a month of about 150 gallons of hot shower water, water from the kitchen sink and 6 gallons per dishwasher load about once a week.
300,000 BTU/month / 31 days / 24 hours = 403. Seems 400-500BTU/hr is a good figure. The water heater was installed in 2008. 36 therms per year. If we figured 4 therms per month, that's 48 therms per year. |
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