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Messages - Ken01

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1
OK, good information.   I will keep an eye on them when I fire it up next fall.

2
Shut down for the season last week after burning a new E-Classic 2400 since Oct 1, 2011.   Cleaned out all areas and found two cracks in the firebox air  flow chambers.  One on the left and one on the right in exactly the same place.  CB Dealer is telling me CB says they have seen this before and not to worry, the cracks will not open up anymore when it is restarted next fall.   I am skeptical these cracks won't keep climbing when it reheats and hit the water jacket seam?    Anyone have a thought?   See attached photos.   

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3
Central Boiler / Re: E-Classic 2400 - Temp Setting and "Back Draft"
« on: April 13, 2012, 04:23:02 AM »
Welcome to the site Ken01.  I stumbled onto this site in January I think and have found a lot of information and ideas, as well as shared some of my own ideas and experiences in hopes it will help someone else.

  On problem #1, I would venture to guess a bad thermostat probe??  I'm running a E-2300 but I've not seen the probe or even where it is.  But my reading is within a degree or 2 of my inline thermometer.  I am also running (just starting this year) a Wood Doctor HE10000, a little bigger unit but a very different setup.  I got it used and it had sat cold through last winter.  On that unit the dial temp guage on the front reads about 200, the aquastat is set at 215 but the actual water temp range is on at 180 and off at 190.  I plan to get a new dial guage and a new digital aquastat for next season instead of the regular dial type in it now.  I want to know exactly what the aquastat is reading. 

On problem #2, I have also experienced the backdraft.  The WD10000 uses a negative draft to pull air in (draft fan in the chimney).  No air box like the 2300 and 2400.  Just a 4" pipe from the doorway down to near the floor of the unit that the air is sucked up through.  Sometimes I see it "PUFF" a cloud of smoke out that pipe.  Sometimes it's worse and even shoots a flame out the pipe.  That's a bit un-nerving.
Now, I had never had it happen (to my knowledge) with my 2300 until I made a change to my primary air channel a couple of months ago.  The original design was badly cracked, separating from the sidewall and completely full of ash and creosote blocking my airflow to the firebox with no good way to clean it out.  So I cut out the back portion of the air channel and used pipe up to the ceiling of the firebox.  Unit burns much cleaner but I was noticing the puffing.    Restricting the primary air flow has helped a lot.  By replacing the air channel the way I did, it had no back-pressure slowing down the airflow after the solenoid as the original design surely did.  But lowering the solenoid helped.  I was also at the time burning small split very dry wood.  Some other guys out here commented on overly dry wood being a cause of this and again I saw the suggestion of restricting the air supply a little bit while burning extra dry wood.  I've also limited this from happening by letting the unit burn down to coals, add about 2 arm loads of the small split wood in first to help replenish the coals and make sure it is burning hot and finish the fill with the lesser dry, bigger pieces of wood.

Hope this helps a little.

Jeff


Good suggestions, I will keep and eye on coal bed depth and look at my air flow.   Thanks for the thoughts.

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Ken, I would confirm that you do not have a pump reversed. Check the flow direction arrow on it, or check your owners manual to be certain your supply/return lines are not hooked up backwards or into the wrong ports. A 15-20 degee difference sounds like you may be pulling off the bottom and returning to the top of the water jacket in the rear corner above the pump mounting area, while your Firestar controller is reading from the top front right. That would be the only explanation I can think of.

Regarding backdraft dust into air intake box, I think I have had that happen if I let my coalbed get to deep in the firebox so it does not draw down like it should.

Good suggestion to check the water flow.  I believe it is right but I may just reverse the pump and see if that changes temp. 

I will keep an eye on my coal bed and see if that has an effect on the backdraft dust.   I try to let it burn down before adding wood but my schedule does not always allow it so could be on those days when I add wood to soon this is happening.   Thanks for the thoughts.

5
ken just wondering why you gave up the 6048? this was my 2nd winter with mine and cant imagine there is a better owb gaser or not

Converted from the 6048 due to neighbors concerns about smoke.  The E-2400 smokes a lot less and is using less wood over all.   I loved the 6048 and it worked well.   If it wasn't for the smoke / neighbor issue I would still have it.

6
New to the Forum, but it seem informative based on what I have read so far

Ran a Classic 6048 for 5 years and this past year converted to an E-Classic 2400.  Have two questions if anyone has a thought.   1)  Digital temp reading on FireStarter Control Panel is 15 degrees warmer then water coming out of furnace - this seems odd to me.  CB dealer change the control panel and the difference increased to 20 degrees.  Have tested the water at the water level check value on the back of the furnace and on a in-line thermometer I have.  With the 6048 I had a 2 degree differential but now a 15 degree.    I have to run my high set point at 190+ degrees to keep the water in the furnace at 175 degrees.  Is this  normal ???      2)  on the E-classic the air blower is in the back with three solenoids opening air flows.  On occasion I find the air blower / solenoid area has been "back drafted" with a grey ash.  Can not figure out what set of conditions cause this "back draft" to occur nor have I ever seen or heard it happen.  Anyone else experienced this?

7
Central Boiler / E-Classic 2400 - Temp Setting and "Back Draft"
« on: April 12, 2012, 12:41:02 PM »
New to the Forum, but it seem informative based on what I have read so far

Ran a Classic 6048 for 5 years and this past summer converted to an E-Classic 2400.  Have two questions if anyone has a thought.   1)  Digital temp reading on FireStarter Control Panel is 15 degrees warmer then water coming out of furnace - this seems odd to me.  CB dealer change the control panel and the difference increased to 20 degrees.  Have tested the water at the water level check value on the back of the furnace and on a in-line thermometer.  With the 6048 I had a 2 degree differential but the 2400 now a 15 degree.    I have to run my high set point at 190+ degrees to keep the water in the furnace at 175 degrees.  Is this  normal ???      2)  on the E-Classic 2400 the air blower is in the back with three solenoids opening air flows.  On occasion I find the air blower / solenoid area has been "back drafted" with a grey ash.  Can not figure out what set of conditions cause this "back draft" to occur nor have I ever seen or heard it happen.  Anyone else experienced this?

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