We just bought 3 junk car washes from a bank and are working on fixing them up. One problem I am having at one location is with a 1.1 million btu Raypak boiler which has the pump and flow switch mounted directly on the header (Raypak factory design). It is used for hot water, and is recirculated through an open gravity tank. The problem I am having is that the flow switch wiggles and won't maintain a good contact on the microswitch. I have replaced the spring on the flowswitch to a very light duty type that barely returns the switch to open when the pump is off. I think the problem is that there is air trapped within the header, making flow around the pump impeller intermittent and slow. I think its stuck there because the inlet and outlet piping go down lower than the heat exchanger before going back up to the tank. Rerouting the plumbing is next to impossible due to the layout of other equipment. Does anyone know of a trick to burp the boiler? I have tried loosening the header and pump bolts, but I just get wet - nothing fixed.
JGinther,
We had the paddle actually break off on a McDonnell Miller flow switch. It was very bad scenario because the broken lower part pf the paddle had to be found within the piping ... in who knows where spot. It might have been because the extra flow velocity that a mechanical engineer said we needed. By repairing the flow switch using more than one paddle ... it reinforced the pivot part where it can break off. That was over 15 years ago so it worked for us. Did you check for a weakness or a hair line crack in the part of the paddle where it actually pivots?
At strategic points in our piping we have Gerand Ball valves where we can check the actual flows with a Gerand Meter ... so we are not in the dark about when there a potential flow problem. We utilize some condensing boilers that are more vulnerable within their internal combustion chambers to low flow ... so specific minimum flow is more critical.
As far as air ... the large back screw on the Grundfos Pump is really great for rectifying that. We also use air perjures in strategic places in the piping.
Hopefully, this information based on actual experience has been explained in a way ... you & others can understand ... & potentially helps.
Mike Walsh
www.kingkoin.com