Modulating Radiant Strip Heating Systems

This page covers Keywarm’s modulating radiant strip heating paths, including BP-LTVU-2S, BP-LTVU-3S and BS-LTSU-M. These systems are suitable for large industrial spaces, high-bay buildings and projects that prefer outdoor heat-generator logic, stronger system separation and more structured radiant heating control.

What Are Modulating Radiant Strip Heating Systems?

Modulating radiant strip heating systems are designed for industrial buildings that require large-area radiant heating, structured system routing and stronger separation between the heat generator and the radiant strip. In many projects, the heat generator is installed outdoors, so gas piping, combustion air and flue discharge remain outside the building.

Who Are These Systems More Suitable For?

These systems are more suitable for high-bay factories, large workshops, aircraft maintenance hangars and other industrial buildings where projects expect radiant heating over a larger area, stronger system separation and clearer judgement based on building safety and installation conditions.

When Should You Consider These Systems First?

They should be considered first when a project values outdoor heat-generator logic, reduced indoor gas-system exposure, large-area radiant coverage and more structured control paths such as two-stage, three-stage or modulating operation.

Core Advantages

Gas Supply and Combustion Air Usually Remain Outdoors


In most typical projects, the gas train and combustion air remain outside the building together with the outdoor heat generator.

Flue Discharge Usually Remains Outdoors


Flue gases are discharged outdoors, which helps create clearer separation between combustion logic and indoor occupied space.

Better for Building Safety Judgement and Fire-Condition Compatibility

Compared with indoor gas-fired radiant paths, these systems are often more favorable where projects are sensitive to gas safety, ventilation and building fire conditions.

Better for Large High-Bay Industrial Spaces

These systems are especially suitable for large industrial buildings, high-bay workshops and aircraft maintenance hangars.

More Suitable for Structured System Routing

They are not just equipment products, but system paths that better match projects requiring organized radiant strip layout.

Better for Control and Operating Path Judgement

Projects can choose between two-stage, three-stage and modulating control paths according to operating logic and project expectations.

A Quick Comparison of the Three Control Paths

Under the same large-tube radiant heating system approach, different control methods correspond to different modulation capabilities, operating performance, and project application directions.

BP-LTVU-2S (Two-Stage Control)

Suitable for projects that expect a clearer staged operating logic while keeping system control relatively simple.

BP-LTVU-3S (Three-Stage Control)

Suitable for projects that require more flexible staged control than two-stage operation, especially where load variation is more evident.

BS-LTSU-M (Modulating Control)

Suitable for projects that require finer control, more stable output adjustment and lower NOx logic based on premix combustion technology.

Typical Applications

Large-Space Factory & Workshop Applications

Suitable for large industrial factories, production workshops, and industrial buildings requiring large-area radiant heating coverage, focusing on indoor-outdoor functional separation, installation condition compatibility, and establishment of the overall building thermal environment. For large-space projects that prefer not to place the combustion process indoors, these systems provide significant application value.

Warehouse & Logistics Building Applications

Suitable for warehouses, logistics buildings, and industrial projects that are more sensitive to large-area radiant heating and indoor safety conditions, focusing on heat utilization logic for the main building space and compatibility with outdoor generator system configurations. For projects concerned with both radiant heating performance and the complexity of indoor safety requirements, these systems are highly recommended for evaluation.

Aircraft Maintenance Hangar Applications

Suitable for aircraft maintenance hangars and other ultra-high-space buildings, focusing on large-area radiant coverage, indoor-outdoor functional separation, compatibility with building safety conditions, and establishment of an overall thermal environment in environments with frequently opened large doors. For these large buildings, which are sensitive to indoor combustion equipment installation and place greater emphasis on effective heat delivery to occupied areas, modulating radiant strip systems are often one of the priority solutions for evaluation.

Industrial Buildings Requiring Output Modulation Capability

Suitable for projects with significant load variations and requirements to adjust output levels according to operating conditions. For industrial applications focusing on staged output switching, step modulation, or continuous proportional modulation capability, these systems are generally more suitable as preliminary comparison solutions.

Projects Requiring Low-NOx Emissions

Suitable for industrial projects with specific requirements for emission performance, especially low-NOx emissions. For applications focusing more on operating quality and emission performance, proportional modulation systems using full premix combustion technology are generally more worthy of priority evaluation.

The application descriptions on the webpage are intended for preliminary evaluation. Actual system length, generator arrangement, control methods, and operating parameters should be further assessed according to project conditions.

How to Understand Two-Stage, Three-Stage and Modulating Control?

The choice between two-stage, three-stage and modulating control is not simply about which one is more advanced. It depends on the project’s operating rhythm, load variation, control expectations and system budget. Two-stage control offers a clearer stepped logic, three-stage control adds flexibility, and the modulating path is more suitable where finer control and lower NOx logic are important.

Quick Comparison

BP-LTVU-2S Models, Technical Data and Installation Documents

BP-LTVU-2S is suitable for projects requiring switching between high and low output levels. Its control logic is more straightforward and suitable for most industrial applications seeking to upgrade from single-stage control to basic staged modulation. For projects with relatively simple modulation requirements but still needing two-stage output switching under different operating conditions, BP-LTVU-2S generally offers strong preliminary evaluation value.

Product Specifications

BP-LTVU-3S Models, Technical Data and Installation Documents

BP-LTVU-3S is suitable for projects requiring switching between high, medium, and low output levels. Compared with two-stage control, it provides a finer level of modulation capability. For industrial applications with more complex load variations and requirements for additional control stages under different operating conditions, BP-LTVU-3S is generally more suitable for priority evaluation than basic two-stage solutions.

Product Specifications

BS-LTSU-M Models, Technical Data and Installation Documents

BS-LTSU-M is suitable for projects requiring higher standards in output modulation continuity, control precision, operational stability, and low-NOx emissions. Compared with two-stage and three-stage systems, proportional modulation emphasizes continuous output variation and more refined operational control. In addition, BS-LTSU-M adopts full premix combustion technology, providing more distinct technical advantages in low-NOx emissions. For industrial projects focusing more on operating quality, emission performance, and precision control, BS-LTSU-M is generally more worthy of priority comparison.

Key Advantages:

  • More Continuous Proportional Modulation
    More suitable for applications with complex load variations and requirements for smoother output changes.
  • More Precise Control
    More suitable for industrial projects requiring higher thermal environment stability.
  • Uses Full Premix Combustion Technology
    This represents not only an upgrade in control logic, but also a more distinct technological approach.
  • Better Suited for Low-NOx Emission Requirements
    For projects focusing more on emission performance, it generally offers stronger comparative value than traditional staged combustion systems.
Product Specifications

How to Understand Model Selection and Configuration

Model / Capacity Range

Different heat input and configuration versions are available according to project requirements.
More specific models, specifications, and selection recommendations can be confirmed through project communication.

Installation & Project Options

Installation positions, control methods, and related technical documentation can be further discussed according to building dimensions, fuel conditions, layout methods, and target operating conditions.
Specific solutions should be based on project conditions and technical evaluation.

How These Systems Differ from HTC / LTV / WAB

Difference from HTC

HTC is a high-intensity ceramic radiant path focused on more direct local radiant effect, while these systems are intended for larger-area radiant strip applications with outdoor heat-generator logic.

Difference from LTV

LTV belongs to low-intensity tube radiant heating systems with different radiant routing and more indoor system logic in many projects. Modulating radiant strip systems are more strongly associated with outdoor heat-generator configuration and strip-based system layout.

Difference from WAB

WAB is an indirect-fired warm air heater for whole-space warm-air coverage, while modulating radiant strip systems are radiant heating paths intended for structured radiant coverage.

Different solutions are not simply a matter of “which is better,” but rather which is more suitable for different building objectives, safety conditions, heat utilization logic, modulation requirements, and emission requirements.

Frequently Asked Questions

Q: What is the main difference between BP-LTVU-2S and BP-LTVU-3S?

A:The main difference lies in the number of control stages. Two-stage systems are suitable for switching between high and low outputs, while three-stage systems support high, medium, and low outputs, providing finer modulation capability than two-stage systems.

Q: What are the advantages of BS-LTSU-M compared with 2S / 3S systems?

A:In addition to providing more continuous output and higher control precision through proportional modulation, BS-LTSU-M also adopts full premix combustion technology, giving it more distinct advantages in low-NOx emissions. For projects focusing more on operational quality and emission performance, BS-LTSU-M generally offers stronger comparative value.

Q: Why are these systems generally more compatible with building conditions?

A:Because their generators are typically installed outdoors, with gas pipelines, combustion air, and exhaust treatment also remaining outdoors. Compared with indoor combustion equipment systems, this generally reduces indoor gas safety requirements and is more compatible with building fire protection levels and indoor forced ventilation conditions.

Q: Why do these systems have advantages in aircraft maintenance hangars?

A:Because aircraft maintenance hangars typically feature ultra-high spaces, large openings, sensitivity to indoor combustion equipment installation, and high requirements for effective heat utilization. Modulating radiant strip systems usually adopt outdoor generator arrangements, making them better suited for the combined requirements of safety conditions, heat utilization logic, and large-area radiant heating in such buildings.

Q: When should proportional modulation systems be prioritized?

A: When a project focuses more on output continuity, control precision, operational stability, and low-NOx emission requirements, proportional modulation systems should generally be prioritized for comparison.

Q: Why are all specifications and drawings not directly displayed on the webpage?

A:Because projects vary greatly in building dimensions, height, generator arrangement conditions, radiant strip length, modulation methods, and operating conditions. Website content is more suitable for preliminary evaluation, while detailed specifications, system configurations, and installation materials are better obtained through project communication.

Q: What materials can Keywarm provide?




A
:According to project requirements, Keywarm can provide one-page PDFs, product manuals, specification documents, and additional installation and product selection support.

Q: If I am still unsure whether to choose two-stage, three-stage, or proportional modulation, what information should I provide first?

A: It is recommended to provide basic information such as building type, dimensions, height, space usage, generator installation conditions, fuel conditions, operating methods, and whether there are emission requirements. Based on this, we can assist with a preliminary evaluation closer to the actual application scenario.

Documentation and Technical Support

For further comparison among two-stage, three-stage, and proportional modulation solutions, or to proceed with project discussions, related materials and technical support are available upon request.

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