Skip to content
General Landlording & Rental Properties

User Stats

55
Posts
1
Votes
Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
1
Votes |
55
Posts

floor-furnace/wall-furnace, good or bad?

Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
Posted Aug 3 2008, 10:49

A lot of smaller, older homes that I am considering purchasing for rentals feature a floor-furnace or in one case a wall-furnace. The house my wife and I rented when we first got married had a floor furnace in it and I don't remember it being a problem or undesirable. But as a landlord, are there drawbacks to these heating systems?

User Stats

22,059
Posts
14,113
Votes
Jon Holdman
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Mercer Island, WA
14,113
Votes |
22,059
Posts
Jon Holdman
  • Rental Property Investor
  • Mercer Island, WA
ModeratorReplied Dec 14 2007, 10:51

I grew up with off these gas floor furnaces. It was fine when we were little and it was tucked into a nook with a fence around it. Then, my dad added on, and it was in the hallway. Made an interesting challenge for little kids, and I had more than one pair of shoes with a grid in the bottom.

The upside was that we had heat even when the electricity went out. So, if that's a concern, then these have an advantage. If they're tucked out of the way, and are blocked off to avoid anyone stepping on them, they should be fine.

Both the wall and the floor units must be properly vented. I've seen wall units that were unvented. Just burned the gas right in the unit, and the combustion gas went into the house. These are bad and should be removed.

Gas furnaces of any sort must have both good venting so the combustion gas exits the house, and must have a good supply of combustion air.

Jon

User Stats

55
Posts
1
Votes
Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
1
Votes |
55
Posts
Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
Replied Dec 14 2007, 19:25

Thanks Jon

BiggerPockets logo
Find, Vet and Invest in Syndications
|
BiggerPockets
PassivePockets will help you find sponsors, evaluate deals, and learn how to invest with confidence.

User Stats

228
Posts
13
Votes
Eric Wang
  • Real Estate Investor
  • San Jose, CA
13
Votes |
228
Posts
Eric Wang
  • Real Estate Investor
  • San Jose, CA
Replied Dec 20 2007, 21:53

Since it's a rental, there is no draw backs. Wall furnace are cheap. You as a landlord only need to provide a functional furnace. Today's wall furnace has a gas shut-off sensor if it is not drafting properly. Having central heating installed is pretty expensive and I don't think you would collect more rent if you had it.

User Stats

55
Posts
1
Votes
Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
1
Votes |
55
Posts
Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
Replied Dec 21 2007, 20:47

Thanks

User Stats

120
Posts
7
Votes
Sean Gallagher
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Millsboro, DE
7
Votes |
120
Posts
Sean Gallagher
  • Real Estate Investor
  • Millsboro, DE
Replied Jan 2 2008, 06:28

I hear you need a permit to install a wall furnance, along with an inspector when the install is complete?

User Stats

55
Posts
1
Votes
Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
1
Votes |
55
Posts
Gary M.
  • Real Estate Investor
  • leawood, KS
Replied Jan 2 2008, 18:13

Yeah thanks for the input. I know that for comfort, central heat and air are preferred but for a smaller unit a wall furnace may do the trick.