Wood/Coal Boiler
- Lightning
- Site Moderator
- Posts: 14669
- Joined: Wed. Nov. 16, 2011 9:51 am
- Location: Olean, NY
- Stoker Coal Boiler: Modified AA 130
- Coal Size/Type: Pea Size - Anthracite
I agree with Rob here.. Have you tried leaving the ash pan door open to let it get burning good? Just MAKE SURE you don't leave it unattended, it could get dangerously hot very quickly or could take 30-45 minutes depending on how strong the draft is.Rob R. wrote:Perhaps your draft isn't very strong. Try leaving the manual pipe damper open. With 100+ pounds of coal in that boiler, it should create a WILD fire with enough air.
The other question is if the boiler is undersized?
Outside temp 36f inside temp 73f and everything is working the way it is supposed to. Water temp 183f at oil boiler and Itasca boiler temp 215f for 2 hours, radiant tubing is heating the floor as expected. I still have 30 psi boiler pressure,I tried to lower pressure but it seems that will not be possible because air pockets develop in the system. With 2600ft of tubing and 500ft of fin tube and copper feed lines along with at least 100ft of additional copper piping it seems things are working the way they are supposed to.
I do not close ash pan until the water temp is 180, once the water temp is there maintaining temp for a few hours is not a issue any longer.
What I am curious about is how much coal usage other people are using with their units per month.
I do not close ash pan until the water temp is 180, once the water temp is there maintaining temp for a few hours is not a issue any longer.
What I am curious about is how much coal usage other people are using with their units per month.
- Dennis
- Member
- Posts: 1082
- Joined: Sun. Oct. 30, 2011 5:44 pm
- Location: Pottstown,Pa
- Hand Fed Coal Boiler: AHS/WOC55-multi-fuel/wood,oil,coal
- Coal Size/Type: Anthracite/stove size
In your one pic you posted,it looks like you need a larger expansion tank.Go with a #90 or larger with your hand fired boiler.I had a smaller #30 and psi was always near 28 psi no matter what I did,since I installed a #90 it's stays at 12psi to 15 psi dependeing on boiler temp.Marcuss wrote:I still have 30 psi boiler pressure,I tried to lower pressure but it seems that will not be possible because air pockets develop in the system.
- Dennis
- Member
- Posts: 1082
- Joined: Sun. Oct. 30, 2011 5:44 pm
- Location: Pottstown,Pa
- Hand Fed Coal Boiler: AHS/WOC55-multi-fuel/wood,oil,coal
- Coal Size/Type: Anthracite/stove size
Marcuss wrote:Water temp 183f at oil boiler and Itasca boiler temp 215f for 2 hours, radiant tubing is heating the floor as expected.
With pex tubing your running the boiler too hot now,you don't want to melt your pex lines and have a major problem with only an expensive fix.Now that you have heat in the boiler you need to control that heat.Glad your on your way to a warmer winter.Marcuss wrote:With 2600ft of tubing and 500ft of fin tube and copper feed lines along with at least 100ft of additional copper piping it seems things are working the way they are supposed to.
- 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
Why can't you install it?joeromero wrote:Hi.
Do you have technical books of this boiler model (WCB415)?
I'll appreciate if you can share this info because I have one of this boilers, and I can't install it.