Burning Bit in a Base Burner?
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Anyone doing it?
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Fig,
Ill suggest you need not read any further.....
Ill suggest you need not read any further.....
- SWPaDon
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I'd like to see something like a Glenwood 6 on Bit coal once, just to see what would happen. I know the soot would be a big problem though.
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it would only take ONE serious "puff" with vol's all down the internal passageways and you would have some significant problems.
- Sunny Boy
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I think the term is, "grenading the stove".KingCoal wrote:it would only take ONE serious "puff" with vol's all down the internal passageways and you would have some significant problems.
Paul
- SWPaDon
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Now here is my problem with that. Several on here have had major puffbacks with Anthracite. Severe enough to dislodge the flue pipes from the stoves, as well as blow barometric dampers across the room, and bust the glass out of stoves. That my friend is no different than Bit coal.KingCoal wrote:it would only take ONE serious "puff" with vol's all down the internal passageways and you would have some significant problems.
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i could be seriously mistaken but it was my impression that Bit vol's. are significantly richer, released much faster and in higher volume than those of Anth.
i'm a serious chicken about this sort of thing though so .................................
i'm a serious chicken about this sort of thing though so .................................
- SWPaDon
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- Coal Size/Type: Bituminous
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I've used quite a few different types of Bit coal. Some are more volatile than others, that's for sure. The stuff I'm currently using is about 'mid-range' in the different Bit coals I've used. The 'Big Vein' coal I used was the lowest volatility of any of the ones I've used, and there was no soot with it........just flyash. The coal from the Masontown mine was the highest, It's the coal that blew flames over 6 feet out of my load door.
I am curious about the use of Bit in a baseburner though.
I am curious about the use of Bit in a baseburner though.
- Canaan coal man
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I have burned bit im my G6.................
Long story short, early December I bought 15bags of nut anthracite from a buddy who just bought a house with a box stove insert. He is all about the pellet stoves, I tried to convert him to our black rock way of life but nope he traded the insert for a pellet stove. Any who, the brand was from a local coal distributor I don't remember the name. It was well sized clean and burned beautifully. One of the bags I bought was a clear plastic bag filled with smaller sized stuff like large pea size and it had no shine to it what so ever. well I saved that bag for last, and the day I filled my hod will be the first and last time I burn bit EVER. when I dumped it on the pot big smokey Yellow flames erupted. The fire smoked for hours after I loaded it even after the volitals were lit. The Stink was another thing Bit smoke gave me a headache, it smelled like a burning tire, and the ash clinked together way to easy.
The stuff is nasty, I give anyone who burns Bit credit, I don't mean to offend anyone that dose but ill never burn that donkey crap again in my life......................
Long story short, early December I bought 15bags of nut anthracite from a buddy who just bought a house with a box stove insert. He is all about the pellet stoves, I tried to convert him to our black rock way of life but nope he traded the insert for a pellet stove. Any who, the brand was from a local coal distributor I don't remember the name. It was well sized clean and burned beautifully. One of the bags I bought was a clear plastic bag filled with smaller sized stuff like large pea size and it had no shine to it what so ever. well I saved that bag for last, and the day I filled my hod will be the first and last time I burn bit EVER. when I dumped it on the pot big smokey Yellow flames erupted. The fire smoked for hours after I loaded it even after the volitals were lit. The Stink was another thing Bit smoke gave me a headache, it smelled like a burning tire, and the ash clinked together way to easy.
The stuff is nasty, I give anyone who burns Bit credit, I don't mean to offend anyone that dose but ill never burn that donkey crap again in my life......................
- SWPaDon
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- Location: Southwest Pa.
- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Clayton 1600M
- Coal Size/Type: Bituminous
- Other Heating: Oil furnace
All the Bit coals I've burned have smoked to varying degrees, except the Big Vein. It would burn clean after the initial volatiles burned off. But it would melt into a big mass and had to be broken up after about the first hour of loading. The only size of the Big Vein I could get was about the size of 'Pea Anthracite'. It was a pain to mess with, but I got the same heat value from 5 tons of it, as I got from 12 to 14 tons of any other bit coal I've used.Canaan coal man wrote:I have burned bit im my G6.................
Long story short, early December I bought 15bags of nut anthracite from a buddy who just bought a house with a box stove insert. He is all about the pellet stoves, I tried to convert him to our black rock way of life but nope he traded the insert for a pellet stove. Any who, the brand was from a local coal distributor I don't remember the name. It was well sized clean and burned beautifully. One of the bags I bought was a clear plastic bag filled with smaller sized stuff like large pea size and it had no shine to it what so ever. well I saved that bag for last, and the day I filled my hod will be the first and last time I burn bit EVER. when I dumped it on the pot big smokey Yellow flames erupted. The fire smoked for hours after I loaded it even after the volitals were lit. The Stink was another thing Bit smoke gave me a headache, it smelled like a burning tire, and the ash clinked together way to easy.
The stuff is nasty, I give anyone who burns Bit credit, I don't mean to offend anyone that dose but ill never burn that donkey crap again in my life......................
- Sunny Boy
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- Location: Central NY
- Hand Fed Coal Boiler: Anthracite Industrial, domestic hot water heater
- Baseburners & Antiques: Glenwood range 208, # 6 base heater, 2 Modern Oak 118.
- Coal Size/Type: Nuts !
- Other Heating: Oil &electric plenum furnace
With a base heater like a Glenwood #6, the back pipe flues and base chambers only way to release explosive pressure is through the flues, and/or, through the clean out door directly under the ash pan. Or to crack open seams that don't have much in the way of fasteners to hold them closed to begin with.
And, with it's greater surface area exposed to an explosive pressure wave, I'd be worried about cracking that fragile floor pan of the base chamber.
Paul
And, with it's greater surface area exposed to an explosive pressure wave, I'd be worried about cracking that fragile floor pan of the base chamber.
Paul
- SWPaDon
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- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Clayton 1600M
- Coal Size/Type: Bituminous
- Other Heating: Oil furnace
And this is the part that I can't wrap my feeble mind around. Both coals can be highly explosive given the right conditions. The coal I'm using right now works beautiful, as long as I leave some glowing coals to burn off the volatiles. The only time I get a puffback, is if I get the coals really, really hot before adding fresh.Sunny Boy wrote:With a base heater like a Glenwood #6, the back pipe flues and base chambers only way to release explosive pressure is through the flues, and/or, through the clean out door directly under the ash pan. Or to crack open seams that don't have much in the way of fasteners to hold them closed to begin with.
And, with it's greater surface area exposed to an explosive pressure wave, I'd be worried about cracking that fragile floor pan of the base chamber.
Paul