oil safety valve installation price
The high pressure safety valve, or oil relief valve, is located near the oil pump. When the oil is thick and cold, the oil pressure forces down the valves against the spring tension, allowing the oil to go to the engine bearings. Then, it returns it to the crankcase. The oil pressure valve makes sure that the oil pressure is consistent at all the bearings, regardless of the speed of the engine. At high engine speed, the excess oil escapes so that power isn’t lost by the driving the oil pump.
If you suspect any damage at all to the high pressure safety valve, you should get it checked immediately. One of our expert mechanics can help you diagnose the problem and determine if a replacement is warranted.
If the high pressure safety valves fail, that could result in a leaking or cracked oil cooler. If that happens, the oil pressure valves will have to be removed and examined, and that could be a very expensive procedure. If a valve ends up being stuck, excessive oil pressure can result, and there could be serious damage to the engine. Work with one of our expert mechanics if you discover any of the symptoms we have described above.
Features/BenefitsWebster Oil Safety Valves Provide Important Protection in Oil Burner Supply Systems with Pressurized Supply Lines; The OSV Relieves Pressure Strain on Fuel Pump Inlets and Seals and Prevents Tank Siphoning and Spilling Caused by Accidental Line Breaks; The OSV is Mounted Close to the Burner Assembly; The OSV Operates as a Pressure Reducer, with Supply Line Pressure on the Valve Inlet Side and Fuel Pump Vacuum on the Valve Outlet Side
3. Charges WAGS recommended "Fair & Reasonable Pricing" for the WAGS Valve Installation. The recommended additional cost to install a WAGS Valve on a new Low-Cost/Tried & True Tank Water Heater; Gas, Electric, or Oil is $325 – $375.
4. Completes WAGS Installation label and puts on Water Heater, and makes sure the WAGS Warranty Card is filled out and mailed in on behalf of the property owner.
1. If and When the property owners Water Heater fails... you will be the Plumber they call for replacement (The Installation label makes it easy for them to call you... and THANK YOU for avoiding major water damage!!!)
2. Aquaguard LLC markets nationally in all major plumbing trade publications, and gets loads of property owner inquiries for "recommended plumbers" to call for professional installation, we will be happy to refer these customers to WAGS CERTIFIED PLUMBERSin their service area.
To become a WAGS CERTIFIED PLUMBER please fill out your contact information below, include your company website address, and include any questions in the comments section...have you installed a WAGS Valve? One of our knowledgeable representatives will get in touch with you and show you how the WAGS Valve can help your company grow and give your customers the WAGS Water Heater Safety Valve Peace of Mind!
Under a new Massachusetts oil heating lawwhich went into effect on September 30, 2011, every homeowner with an oil heating system is required to install an oil safety valve or an oil supply line with protective sleeve in their system. The cost is approximately $150 to $350 depending on the system. The required upgrade is to prevent leaks from tanks and pipes that connect to your furnace. The upgrade will reduce the risk of an oil leak so by making a relatively small expenditure now, you can prevent a much greater expense in the future.
Owners of 1- to 4-unit residences that are heated with oil must already have or install an oil safety valve or an oil supply line with a protective sleeve. Installation of these devices must be performed by a licensed oil burner technician. Technicians are employed by companies that deliver home heating oil or are self-employed. It is important to note that heating oil systems installed on or after January 1, 1990 most likely are already in compliance because state fire codes implemented these requirements on new installations at that time.
those changes are in compliance with the oil burning equipment regulations; a copy of the oil burner permit from the local fire department may be used to demonstrate compliance.
Not only is complying with the new law required, it makes good financial and environmental sense. Homeowners who take these preventive measures can avoid the disruption and expense that can be caused by heating oil leaks. A leak may result in exposure to petroleum vapors in your home. If the leak reaches the soil or groundwater beneath your house, then a cleanup must be performed to restore your property to state environmental standards. Such a leak can cost many thousands to clean up. Leaks that affect another property or impact drinking water supply wells can complicate the cleanup and increase the expense. Each year, several hundred Massachusetts families experience some kind of leak.
The typical cost of installing either an oil safety valve or oil supply line with a protective sleeve ranges from $150 – $350 (including labor, parts, and local permit fees).
R.W. Beckett’s burner controls were created with customer satisfaction and safety in mind. Our entire suite of burner controls utilizes the most current technology to safely control the combustion process.
Here in Massachusetts we had a new law passed on Jan. 8, 2009 and I’m very excited about it and the great things that it will hopefully do. It’s called M.G.L. Chapter 453 and its alias is the ‘Oil Tank Law,” but many also call it the ‘Oil Line Law.”
It states that before July 1, 2010 insurers will have to make casualty insurance available to Massachusetts homeowners, and at a reasonable rate, for a spill caused by a leaking oil tank or failed line. This is the first time in many years that oil heated homes will be covered in the event of just normal wear and tear and aging of a fuel tank.
Homeowners must do their part. Every property owner of a one to four family residence must either replace his oil line in a non-metallic sleeve, or upgrade the line through the use of an oil safety valve. If the entire tank and line are below the pump nothing has to be done, but those jobs are very rare.
The absolute best way to upgrade an existing system is a new sleeved line, but the prv/osv valve makes a good option for many. Finally, oil companies and heating contractors can gain some much needed work and a simple permit signed by the installer and filed with the local fire department is all that is needed to comply. The permit must be made out, but the fire department doesn’t have to inspect it since the technician is the inspector, per se.
Sunstrand originally created the concept for these valves in the 1960s for high head and pressurized applications’the PRV-38, Pressure Reducing Valve – 3/8″‘and they were followed by Webster with their model. In 1976 Webster changed the name to OSV® (oil safety valve). Sundstrand bowed out of the PRV market in the mid-1970s since they just weren’t selling enough of them to keep making them, Suntec brought them back in the 1980s for use as the PRV/OSV.
The oil safety valve is a dynamic pressure reducer; it requires pressure or vacuum to work. As a pressure reducer (PRV), it’s invaluable in protecting pump seals under the high pressures needed to get oil up to burners located high overhead. Working with booster pumps, the PRV does a great job. As an OSV®, the valve works to protect us against underground oil line leaks. I was first introduced to these devices while working on oil lift jobs in the Air Force and found them everywhere, especially in aircraft hangers.
Basically, what most of us knew was if you put 30 psi on a PRV/OSV the pressure goes to about 10 psi. If you put three psi on it you’ll get about one psi out of it. That wasn’t new, but what Sam found was that if you put zero psi on it you got nothing out, but apply vacuum to it and it would open. Pressure is a positive force, vacuum is a negative force. If you have a PRV/OSV at zero pressure and you exert two inches of vacuum, it will open. As long as you keep a vacuum on it the valve stays open. Imagine your finger on a straw filled with liquid, the liquid stays inside because you’ve trapped it in a vacuum. But, if you lose vacuum, the valve closes and the OSV was born.
If you do a search of the PRV/OSV you’ll find the PRV/OSV mentioned all over the place because they work and do the job. Several states, Massachusetts and Maine, now have legislation mandating them and yet the industry still wonders about them. The Europeans use them and even have models that can be adjusted based on the height of the oil level and the pump, Figure 4. So what gives? Well, it’s like a lot of things; if we don’t understand, it we knock it. But the PRV/OSV is a device that can help you and truly do a lot to clean up oil heat’s image. By using the PRV/OSV you can prevent unseen, underground oil line leaks, and that’s a big deal today, as it always has been.
If you still can’t get the PRV/OSV to work look at your system. The purpose of the PRV/OSV is to protect property against oil line failures, but if there’s too much vacuum you probably don’t need it. Remember, when being used as an oil safety valve, it’s a gravity (vacuum) device, not a pressure device. Make sure you power vacuum bleed that pump too, and you can find the directions for that at my website, it’s my Field Note No. 6.
*George Lanthier is the owner of Firedragon Enterprises, a teaching, publishing and consulting firm. He is the author of over 25 books on oil heating and HVAC subjects. He can be reached at 608 Moose Hill Rd., Leicester, MA 01524. His phone is 508-421-3490, fax at 508-421-3477
Surface-controlled subsurface safety valves (SCSSVs) are critical components of well completions, preventing uncontrolled flow in the case of catastrophic damage to wellhead equipment. Fail-safe closure must be certain to ensure proper security of the well. However, this is not the only function in which it must be reliable—the valve must remain open to produce the well. Schlumberger surface controlled subsurface safety valves exceed all ISO 10432 and API Spec 14A requirements for pressure integrity, leakage acceptance criteria, and slam closure.
Through decades of innovation and experience, Schlumberger safety valve flapper systems are proven robust and reliable. The multizone dynamic seal technology for hydraulic actuation of subsurface safety valves is a further improvement in reliability performance when compared with traditional seal systems in the industry.
The multizone seal technology is currently available in the GeoGuard high-performance deepwater safety valves, which is validated to API Spec 14A V1 and V1-H.