B
brianc1
hello all, if you cant get the excess air below 75percent without the co going very high, during servicing an oil burner. does it need a new burner or is there anything else you can do
Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws
If you get better combustion, you will, as you say, get less excess air but the co2 will get higher - as it should do. Surely that is the advantage of modern burners & what service engineers should be aiming for, :- high as possible co2 with less excess air & obviously smoke number more or less zero. Co2 is the indication of how well the oil is being burned. The very old burners needed excess air so didn't burn the oil as well as newer burners.put in a brand new nozzle just before analysis. can the nozzle spray pattern have an outcome on the co/co2 emissions? if i change the nozzle pattern is it possible that the oil/air will mix better and i will get better combustion, therefore less co2 and excess air?
When I said older burners, I meant generally the burners from way back in time, that had slow motor speeds and " dead" looking hairy flame. They often relied on excess air. This meant they didn't have high levels of co2. The chimneys/ flues tended not to be" wet", like new flues are, partly due to excess air & often boilers were not made as efficient as now, so high flue temp. Nowadays the reduced excess air is not diluting the gases as much & added to that the burners & boilers, even on standard eff. are more eff. Not sure what lecturer meant by cold weather, as boilers with too much air are more likely to fail on cold starts in very cold days.hi again. it was an 1991 bentone burner, not sure of the model. the boiler was an old dual fuel thing. you were saying BEST that the older burners needed excess air, i done a servicing course about 5 years ago and the lecturer said you should always set up the burner with about 25% excess air to allow for cold weather, impurities in the oil or bad quality oil etc. what do you think of that?
Reply to the thread, titled "oil boiler flue gas analysis" which is posted in Boiler Advice Forum on Plumbers Forums.
We recommend City Plumbing Supplies, BES, and Plumbing Superstore for all plumbing supplies.