Yellow Flame, A Christmas Stoker Boiler
- StokerDon
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 7496
- Joined: Mon. Nov. 11, 2013 11:17 am
- Location: PA, Southern York County!
- Stoker Coal Boiler: Gentleman Janitor GJ-5, Van Wert VA-600, Axeman Anderson130 X3.
- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Harman SF3500 reduced down to 3 grates connected to its own plenum
- Coal Size/Type: Rice, Chestnut and whatever will fit through the door on the Harman
- Other Heating: Noth'in but COAL! Well, Maybe a little tiny bit of wood
Wow,
Thanks for all the suggestions guys. I was out spending quality time with the scraper, the wirewheel and some paint for a few hours and I come back in to find all this nice info. I will be calling that ThermoPEX place in Fallston tomorrow morning. Hopefully they won't think I'm stealing pluming secrets!
The doors and frames needed a lot more wheeling and cleaning then I thought they would. It took all day and into the night to get them in paint. I've been so focused on this boiler, I totaly forgot about the Alaska. I went down stairs to get something, thought I would take a quick look in the hopper, EMPTY! I could see the paddle moving back and forth gasping for coal. I opened the door and there was a faint bit of light on the grate. I cranked the feed rate all the way up, through some coal on top, filled the hopper and it came back to life.
Tomorrow will be hopper restoration and placing the base and the boiler. My back hurts just think'in about it.
-Don
Thanks for all the suggestions guys. I was out spending quality time with the scraper, the wirewheel and some paint for a few hours and I come back in to find all this nice info. I will be calling that ThermoPEX place in Fallston tomorrow morning. Hopefully they won't think I'm stealing pluming secrets!
The doors and frames needed a lot more wheeling and cleaning then I thought they would. It took all day and into the night to get them in paint. I've been so focused on this boiler, I totaly forgot about the Alaska. I went down stairs to get something, thought I would take a quick look in the hopper, EMPTY! I could see the paddle moving back and forth gasping for coal. I opened the door and there was a faint bit of light on the grate. I cranked the feed rate all the way up, through some coal on top, filled the hopper and it came back to life.
Tomorrow will be hopper restoration and placing the base and the boiler. My back hurts just think'in about it.
-Don
- Hambden Bob
- Member
- Posts: 8549
- Joined: Mon. Jan. 04, 2010 10:54 am
- Location: Hambden Twp. Geauga County,Ohio
- Hot Air Coal Stoker Stove: Harman 1998 Magnum Stoker
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: Blower Model Coal Chubby 1982-Serial#0097
- Coal Size/Type: Rice-A-Roni ! / Nut
- Other Heating: Pro-Pain Forced Air
We Feed Animals ! Enjoy the Help ! Carry On,Stoker Don !
- Scottscoaled
- Member
- Posts: 2812
- Joined: Tue. Jan. 08, 2008 9:51 pm
- Location: Malta N.Y.
- Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520, 700, Van Wert 800 GJ 61,53
- Baseburners & Antiques: Magic Stewart 16, times 2!
- Coal Size/Type: Lots of buck
- Other Heating: Slant Fin electric boiler backup
Hey Stoker Don! Here is a link to some insulated pex that might work well for you. The price is real good!
http://www.greatestsavingsdeals.com/material-hand ... 75623.html
http://www.greatestsavingsdeals.com/material-hand ... 75623.html
- StokerDon
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 7496
- Joined: Mon. Nov. 11, 2013 11:17 am
- Location: PA, Southern York County!
- Stoker Coal Boiler: Gentleman Janitor GJ-5, Van Wert VA-600, Axeman Anderson130 X3.
- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Harman SF3500 reduced down to 3 grates connected to its own plenum
- Coal Size/Type: Rice, Chestnut and whatever will fit through the door on the Harman
- Other Heating: Noth'in but COAL! Well, Maybe a little tiny bit of wood
Thanks Scott, I will check it out.
-Don
-Don
- StokerDon
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 7496
- Joined: Mon. Nov. 11, 2013 11:17 am
- Location: PA, Southern York County!
- Stoker Coal Boiler: Gentleman Janitor GJ-5, Van Wert VA-600, Axeman Anderson130 X3.
- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Harman SF3500 reduced down to 3 grates connected to its own plenum
- Coal Size/Type: Rice, Chestnut and whatever will fit through the door on the Harman
- Other Heating: Noth'in but COAL! Well, Maybe a little tiny bit of wood
I called the ThermoPEX guy in Fallston. He had some intresting things to say. He doesn't currently have 1.25" in stock, wondered why I wanted to use 1.25". I told him what I was doing. He said he has been installing wood boilers for 20 years in homes and uses 1" all the way up to about 500KBTU's, he only uses 1.25" for warehouses. He does have the 1" in stock and I could pick it up today. The only problem is it's $12 a foot, thats about twice as much as the place in Wisconson. $1000 for PEX may blow the budget for this project. There is an Amish hardware & pluming supply place accross the river in Holtwood. I'm sure they deal with woodboilers. Being Amish, they don't have a website, I have to go there.
I wil be thinking of all this over the next few hours of grinding, wheeling and painting.
-Don
I wil be thinking of all this over the next few hours of grinding, wheeling and painting.
-Don
- Sting
- Member
- Posts: 2983
- Joined: Mon. Feb. 25, 2008 4:24 pm
- Location: Lower Fox Valley = Wisconsin
- Other Heating: OBSO Lennox Pulse "Air Scorcher" burning NG
Just because one "lemming" only uses the wrong size - doesn't mean you need to join the flock and go off the cliff with the rest.
Wood boiler guys are not able to control their circulation temperatures - they start off with an inconstant flow of energy= so in the cold harsh light of the day - It makes No Difference if they use the wrong size distribution [or incorrect] system
Follow the path young Sky-walker
Wood boiler guys are not able to control their circulation temperatures - they start off with an inconstant flow of energy= so in the cold harsh light of the day - It makes No Difference if they use the wrong size distribution [or incorrect] system
Follow the path young Sky-walker
- windyhill4.2
- Member
- Posts: 6072
- Joined: Fri. Nov. 22, 2013 2:17 pm
- Location: Jonestown,Pa.17038
- Stoker Coal Boiler: 1960 EFM520 installed in truck box
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: Crane 404 with variable blower
- Coal Size/Type: 404-nut, 520 rice ,anthracite for both
Well,i am no expert on heating systems,i did design & install our current system with no professional help.We have an OWB heating 3 buildings & DHW for 2 houses all using 1 " Pex, including 1 pex pair that is over 500' till water gets back to the stove,that 500' run heats 1 hard to heat house & DHW & then goes on to #2 house to do the DHW b4 returning to the stove,with a Taco 007 circulator,we've been doing this since Sept. 06,also 1" pex to #2 house 160' round trip for heating,also 1"pex 160' round trip to our repair shop for lots,& lots of heat,no problems with heating ability or low water temps in 1" pex,apparently I should have used 4" pex (BIGGER IS BETTER). Where's the backhoe?,gotta tear it all up & go bigger ,sorry I don't follow that logic,but unfortunately we are heating with wood so maybe coal needs bigger pex???????????????????
- Rob R.
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 18004
- Joined: Fri. Dec. 28, 2007 4:26 pm
- Location: Chazy, NY
- Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: Chubby Jr
The "logic" is that you size the pipe and pump according to the load. Bigger is NOT better, more like "as big as necessary, as small as possible".windyhill4.2 wrote:Well,i am no expert on heating systems,i did design & install our current system with no professional help.We have an OWB heating 3 buildings & DHW for 2 houses all using 1 " Pex, including 1 pex pair that is over 500' till water gets back to the stove,that 500' run heats 1 hard to heat house & DHW & then goes on to #2 house to do the DHW b4 returning to the stove,with a Taco 007 circulator,we've been doing this since Sept. 06,also 1" pex to #2 house 160' round trip for heating,also 1"pex 160' round trip to our repair shop for lots,& lots of heat,no problems with heating ability or low water temps in 1" pex,apparently I should have used 4" pex (BIGGER IS BETTER). Where's the backhoe?,gotta tear it all up & go bigger ,sorry I don't follow that logic,but unfortunately we are heating with wood so maybe coal needs bigger pex???????????????????
Just because something works for one house doesn't mean it will work for another. Whatever house you are heating has a heat load within the capabilities of your system...great. I bet if you were heating a spray-foam insulated doghouse with that OWB you wouldn't have used the same size pipe or pump.
True story - Last winter I had to help out a friend that was sitting in a cold house getting the death glare from his wife...imagine spending 10k to put a coal boiler in a detached garage only to find out that the 1" pex and Taco circulator he used was not adequate to move the heat to the house. The boiler was sitting in the garage at 200 degrees, ready to do its job but the system couldn't move the heat to the house. The flow rate was too low, and the radiation in the house could not get above 160 degrees on a subzero day. I had him swap the circulator to a Taco 011, and the system in the house promptly came up to 180 degrees and the house reached the thermostat setting. It still struggles on the -20 days, but at least he isn't getting the death glare any more. To use your statement, if he wants to get more heat into the house he needs to go get a backhoe and go bigger. If he had used 1.25" in the beginning, he could be using less electric to run the circulator and get the same or more heat to the house.
That reminds me, when looking at the cost of a system, make sure you pencil out the cost of running the circulators for 10 years or so.
- windyhill4.2
- Member
- Posts: 6072
- Joined: Fri. Nov. 22, 2013 2:17 pm
- Location: Jonestown,Pa.17038
- Stoker Coal Boiler: 1960 EFM520 installed in truck box
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: Crane 404 with variable blower
- Coal Size/Type: 404-nut, 520 rice ,anthracite for both
My wife keeps trying to tell me that people do not get sarcasm,obviously that's true as you didn't either,we do not have an issue getting HOT water to the intended point.! My sarcastic ( BIGGER IS BETTER) was a reflection of the ( Lemming if you use 1" Pex) post. We have no problem getting serious heat from a 20x20 heat exchanger fed by 1" pex with a 007 circulator, as the saying goes , if you aint learning you is dead,i'm still learning,i guess I tend to forget you coal burners use warm water-120-160 ,we are using 180 which may then be a concern when we switch to coal.One doesn't need to say (you are crazy if you use 1' vs.1.25)just give an opinion based on your knowledge or give facts based on industry standards that do indeed work,as in 1,000's of OWB's working with 1" pex on very long runs,capable of pulling lots of heat from that 180* water running thru the 1" pex,not saying 1.25 isn't better,just pisses me off when people think their way of thinking is THE ONLY rite way!!!!!!!!! ex. dodge is better than ford is better than chevy is better than................ I would prefer to hear WHY to use bigger is better rather than to say someone is an idiot for doing the accepted way,rather than the "better way". Pencil out the cost of running a circulator -007=60 watts ,best use radiant heat for least operating cost,but that won't work in a shop with gasoline fumes,so back to getting heat into building safely.
- Rob R.
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 18004
- Joined: Fri. Dec. 28, 2007 4:26 pm
- Location: Chazy, NY
- Stoker Coal Boiler: EFM 520
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: Chubby Jr
You can use whatever water temperature you need (as long as the pex can handle it). My system is designed to heat the house at -15 with 180 degree water.windyhill4.2 wrote: I tend to forget you coal burners use warm water-120-160 ,we are using 180 which may then be a concern when we switch to coal
Me too. The only evidence of that I have seen in this thread is the guy that Don called and said he uses 1" for everything. I bet if someone called him back and said their house was cold it he would check EVERYTHING but the flow rate of the tubing...since changing it after the fact is a huge expense.windyhill4.2 wrote:just pisses me off when people think their way of thinking is THE ONLY rite way!!!!!!!!!
At the end of the day, if the load of the house comes in at 70,000 BTU's per hour or less 1" pex should be fine.
- windyhill4.2
- Member
- Posts: 6072
- Joined: Fri. Nov. 22, 2013 2:17 pm
- Location: Jonestown,Pa.17038
- Stoker Coal Boiler: 1960 EFM520 installed in truck box
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: Crane 404 with variable blower
- Coal Size/Type: 404-nut, 520 rice ,anthracite for both
this is what I was referring to ,not about someone selling only one size,but "lemming" only uses the wrong size & wood boiler guys, most OWB are not boiler ,as a boiler is a closed system which the open system like we have is more rust prone.Unable to control circulation temps??? all that = wrong size is ok?????/You tell me that isn't opinionated without facts to back up accusations ??? We have had no trouble extracting the heat we need from 1 " pex,20x20 heat exchanger in our shop,works wonderful for wrong size pex !!! only thing we have found wrong with this whole system is the fuel..wood = too much work !!! But no liquid fuel since Sept. 2006 & that is the good part.Sting wrote:Just because one "lemming" only uses the wrong size - doesn't mean you need to join the flock and go off the cliff with the rest.
Wood boiler guys are not able to control their circulation temperatures - they start off with an inconstant flow of energy= so in the cold harsh light of the day - It makes No Difference if they use the wrong size distribution [or incorrect] system
Follow the path young Sky-walker
- windyhill4.2
- Member
- Posts: 6072
- Joined: Fri. Nov. 22, 2013 2:17 pm
- Location: Jonestown,Pa.17038
- Stoker Coal Boiler: 1960 EFM520 installed in truck box
- Hand Fed Coal Stove: Crane 404 with variable blower
- Coal Size/Type: 404-nut, 520 rice ,anthracite for both
if heat load is less than 70,000 BTU 1" is ok ? if you are right on that we sure will have to rethink the size of coal boiler we eventually replace our OWB with,as that statement would indicate our shop has a less than 70,000 BTU demand which is very hard to believe,but good if true. Our house then would even have less than that 70k as it uses a smaller exchanger than the shop,I can only hope your formula is close to right,still learning.
- StokerDon
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 7496
- Joined: Mon. Nov. 11, 2013 11:17 am
- Location: PA, Southern York County!
- Stoker Coal Boiler: Gentleman Janitor GJ-5, Van Wert VA-600, Axeman Anderson130 X3.
- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Harman SF3500 reduced down to 3 grates connected to its own plenum
- Coal Size/Type: Rice, Chestnut and whatever will fit through the door on the Harman
- Other Heating: Noth'in but COAL! Well, Maybe a little tiny bit of wood
OK OK I get it, no more that 70KBTU for 1" PEX. Some people disagee, I am going with 1.25". Now take it outside if you want to fight about it! This is a story about my Christmas present!
UPDATE TO FOLLOW!!!!!
Rev. Larry wrote-
Enjoy your Yellow Flame. It's not sexy, it isn't really appealing. It was a simple grey box and you aren't required to tend it on a regular basis. Just fill the hopper with rice coal and take out the ashes every two days and it will probably outlive you!
Rev. Larry
Sorry Rev. Larry, I disagree with the "not sexy" and " not appealing" parts.
-Don
UPDATE TO FOLLOW!!!!!
Rev. Larry wrote-
Enjoy your Yellow Flame. It's not sexy, it isn't really appealing. It was a simple grey box and you aren't required to tend it on a regular basis. Just fill the hopper with rice coal and take out the ashes every two days and it will probably outlive you!
Rev. Larry
Sorry Rev. Larry, I disagree with the "not sexy" and " not appealing" parts.
-Don
- StokerDon
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 7496
- Joined: Mon. Nov. 11, 2013 11:17 am
- Location: PA, Southern York County!
- Stoker Coal Boiler: Gentleman Janitor GJ-5, Van Wert VA-600, Axeman Anderson130 X3.
- Hand Fed Coal Furnace: Harman SF3500 reduced down to 3 grates connected to its own plenum
- Coal Size/Type: Rice, Chestnut and whatever will fit through the door on the Harman
- Other Heating: Noth'in but COAL! Well, Maybe a little tiny bit of wood
I'm sure you all remeber in late 60's and early 70's, the SCCA had a very popular racing series called the TRANS-AM. In this racing series were Mustangs, Camaros and Challengers. What you may not know is that Yellow Flame also came out with a competion version of there 3 grate stoker boiler called the "Yellow Flame Competion Series".
Anybody wana race??????
Anybody wana race??????