cantbreak80
Maybe I need new clubs
slash,
How many bays? What's the outside air temp?
Re: infrared gun. Thye work best when aimed at non-reflective surfaces. So, a patch of the flat black spray paint or a wrap of non-shiny black tape on the copper piping will provide some reasonable data. Measure the outlet of the boiler...anywhere from the boiler's header to where the pipe feeds the manifold...maybe even at the tank's outlet. Then, measure the return pipe before the by-pass...the further from the by-pass the better. The difference between those measurements is the Delta T. With the system up to temperature, this should be in the neighborhood of 20 degrees. (it probably won't be)
Then, measure the temp of the inlet piping after the by-pass...it will likely be very close to the outlet temp. Report these readings and maybe we can make some suggestions. (I'm still stuck on the worn impeller thing). I'd also like to know if the "issue" is new or has it always short cycled.
Raypak recommends Ethylene Glycol...automotive antifreeze. That's what your photo looks like. With a 514,000 btu boiler...I'm thinking it's a 5 bay? Probably no more than two or three gallons will bring it up to the red line. Adding a gallon or two of straight antifreeze won't do any injury...it's going to mix just fine. Antifreeze is used because too often a power failure occurs during freezing weather and you don't want the system to freeze. While you've got the plug out of the tank, shine a light down there and observe the turbulence of the glycol...lots of volume is great. A "quiet" flow into the tank, not so much! Kind of hard to describe, but it should be "churning".
How many bays? What's the outside air temp?
Re: infrared gun. Thye work best when aimed at non-reflective surfaces. So, a patch of the flat black spray paint or a wrap of non-shiny black tape on the copper piping will provide some reasonable data. Measure the outlet of the boiler...anywhere from the boiler's header to where the pipe feeds the manifold...maybe even at the tank's outlet. Then, measure the return pipe before the by-pass...the further from the by-pass the better. The difference between those measurements is the Delta T. With the system up to temperature, this should be in the neighborhood of 20 degrees. (it probably won't be)
Then, measure the temp of the inlet piping after the by-pass...it will likely be very close to the outlet temp. Report these readings and maybe we can make some suggestions. (I'm still stuck on the worn impeller thing). I'd also like to know if the "issue" is new or has it always short cycled.
Raypak recommends Ethylene Glycol...automotive antifreeze. That's what your photo looks like. With a 514,000 btu boiler...I'm thinking it's a 5 bay? Probably no more than two or three gallons will bring it up to the red line. Adding a gallon or two of straight antifreeze won't do any injury...it's going to mix just fine. Antifreeze is used because too often a power failure occurs during freezing weather and you don't want the system to freeze. While you've got the plug out of the tank, shine a light down there and observe the turbulence of the glycol...lots of volume is great. A "quiet" flow into the tank, not so much! Kind of hard to describe, but it should be "churning".