If I look in the glycol tank, what am I looking for exactly?
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So, why is your boiler bouncing off the high limit? There are 4 or 5 possibilities:
Low water flow
Temperature setting too low
Interrupted pump operation
Modulating control set too high
Excessive by-pass flow
Low water flow is possibly due to an eroded circulator impeller. This is why I suggest observing the velocity of the glycol inside the tank. If the flow from the boiler is significantly reduced, the glycol solution is spending too much time inside the boiler and is getting super-heated. Since the HL probe is located in the boiler’s outlet header, this high temperature hits the probe and the burner is extinguished. A few minutes later, the continuous introduction of cooler glycol lowers the header temperature, the HL switch closes and the burner re-fires.
If the Automatic High Limit is set too low, the boiler’s heating capability quickly reaches that setting and the burner is turned off. Start with a HL setting of 150F…and adjust the MANUAL HL to 170 to 180F. (This will aid in preventing heat soak temperature rise from tripping the red button.)
Interrupted pump operation is unlikely…or you would have reported that, right?
Modulating control set too high. Since this has been recently adjusted, this might be a contributing factor. The standard factory setting is #5 (approx. 143F)…each value on the dial is approximately 6.5 degrees +/-. 143F is good because flue condensation occurs at temps below about 140.
Excessive by-pass flow. The idea here is to temper the boiler’s inlet, reducing warm up time for the returning glycol and preventing thermal shock and flue gas condensation. But, too much by-pass volume will quickly bring the Delta T to zero…the boiler heats the already hot glycol and the set-point of the HL is quickly satisfied.
So, if the issue with the boiler is a recent change from normal, and nothing has been tinkered with, low water flow would be my first suspicion. However, if the by-pass has been “tweaked” open, that alone could be the culprit. Finally, simply adjusting the gas valve and HL settings to “balance the operation” may be all that’s necessary to stop the short cycling.
Therefore, the BIG question…did the boiler operate “normally” before you began experiencing the Manual HL reset issue? If so, what changed that caused the HL to trip.
Or, has the boiler always short cycled? If so, it was not properly adjusted during initial start-up.