mule_roany_mare t1_irspw9w wrote
Reply to comment by im_not_bovvered in Your annual reminder that if your apartment has a radiator, don't open and close the valve. This can create condensation in the system causing a knocking sound. Radiators are designed to be used with a series of open windows to balance heat. by emeyer94
Because you haven’t answered the relevant question.
A pole isn’t a pipe & wanted to understand what you were trying to say.
I give up, enjoy your uncomfortable apartment.
>how am I supposed to know
By answering the damned questions & describing the features of your radiator accurately so I can tell you what you have & how to control the heat in your apartment.
How can you be so sure of what you don’t know & also confident you know everything?
im_not_bovvered t1_irsrlaf wrote
I literally told you exactly what my setup is in an earlier comment.
I have one of these:
https://renov8or.blogspot.com/2015/10/covering-exposed-heating-pipes-with-rope.html
And two radiators that cannot be turned off (the knobs don't work) that are covered with metal covers that are fused to the wall and cannot be removed.
I do not control when the heat is on or off in my building, so why does it matter what kind of boiler I have? I don't control it. Unless my super replaces my radiators (not going to happen) or sets them up with a temperature control (again, not going to happen - I have asked) or I can control the boiler (I don't), there's nothing I, a tenant, can do. If it's cold, call 311. If it's too hot, tough - there is no maximum heat law in New York City. Literally the only things I can do is open my windows, which is how these buildings were designed for combating illness, and run my a/c.
If you are familiar with radiator/steam heat in NYC you know exactly what a heating pole is and you're just being pedantic. I am confident about the building set up that I LIVE IN and how the heat works in my apartment building. Stop trying to gaslight me. This is not my first pre-war apartment with steam heat.
mule_roany_mare t1_irssi01 wrote
No one is gaslighting you.
You just don’t know as much as you think you do. You don’t need to control the boiler or the valve to prevent heat from entering your radiator.
Your options are different depending on what type of heat you have which can be determined by your radiator.
All the stuff you keep saying isn’t what’s relevant.
Enjoy your heat
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