I had the high temp set higher, 180, for the first season, it seemed to work fine. Then I did some steps to reduce the heat requirements for the house and which caused over heating of the boiler and boiling off. I reduced the high temp to 175 and haven't had the over heating problem since. Now I have excessive creosote condensation on the door.
I was able to purchase the new flapper, blower mount extension and deflector plate today. It looks to have some promise for preventing creosote from ruining the motor. I do believe the flapper will be gummed up by creosote if you don’t keep the air chamber where it mounts clean. As I mentioned in an earlier post this should be part of the annual cleaning ritual.
The flapper is a weighted unit hinged at the top that mounts directly to the air intake port. The solenoid is no longer required. The blower mount extension mounts on top of the flapper sandwiching it between the heater and the extension. The extension is drilled on opposite sides to mount the blower. This requires that you rotate the blower 90 degrees so now the motor is not the lowest piece in the assembly – it is now mounted with the shaft horizontal and the intake on the left. The restrictor cover over the blower intake is also removed. Any creosote that makes it past the flapper shouldn’t infiltrate the motor bearings etc. The deflector mounts over the motor to prevent ash or other particulate from falling into the motor. This would be a problem during cleaning if the deflector was not present.
Unfortunately the dealer did not have a blower so I am waiting for the arrival of a new blower before I can run with the new configuration.
One more thing – the flapper I received was set at 9/16 opening which is the recommendation for an empire 100, The instructions recommended an opening of 7/8 – 1 inch for an empire 200 so I set the opening to 15/16 for my aspen. I will let you know how it works once I get it back in operation.