Yes, you can have baseboard hot water heat with either a gas or electric furnace, as long as the furnace is compatible with a hydronic heating system. In this setup, the furnace heats water, which is then circulated through the baseboard units to provide warmth. Gas furnaces are more common for this purpose due to their efficiency and cost-effectiveness, while electric furnaces can also be used but may result in higher energy costs.
If you have hot water heat or steam heat, it will still work. Gas or electric heat has nothing to do with the water system.
Yes you can do that. I had an oil fired furnace that also heated the hot water in a coil inside the furnace. I got an electric hot water heater and had a plumber disconnect the coil in the furnace and hook up the electric hot water heater. No problems after four years.
Not if it was disconnected properly
Not appropriate earthing condition
Is the furnace a hydroponic system? If it is you only need to get a heat exchanger (As you don't want the water to your heater flowing through the furnace) and plumb it as another zone in your house. If not you need to find a device for heating water that fits your furnace. and plumb the heat exchanger to that. I believe an heat exchanger is required by code in either case.
Water works, and electric company.
no you need power to run the board and the igniter
A furnace does NOT have water... A boiler has water .. NICE trick question
Reset on the furnace or breaker tripped?
If it is a hot water system and not steam, once it is properly filled & bled of air no more water should be needed unless there is a leak. Regardless of whether it is steam or hot water it is a Boiler not a furnace.
A furnace coil is a component in a heating system that is responsible for converting electricity or fuel into heat. It consists of a coil of metal tubing through which a heat transfer fluid, such as air or water, flows to transfer the heat to the surrounding space. Furnace coils are commonly found in electric furnaces and boilers.
Depends on the manufacture of the water furnace. Look at the data sheet or data plate on the furnace of contact the manufacture.