krstill
Mechanical
- Jun 14, 2012
- 2
I was wondering if anyone could help me with a situation I have started experiencing.
The appliance will lit correctly, the flame current will rise almost immediately to approx. 6.0 μA.
After 20-30 seconds, the flame current will start reducing over a 30-40 second period to just above the drop-out level of 1.0 μA
After approx. 30 seconds the flame current will start to increase and continue to above 6.0 μA. These appliances will then continue to run without fault.
This behaviour will continue on these units, so every morning from a cold start, same problem.
A basic description of the appliance is as follows:
A rectangular metal fibre burner, positioned 60 mm from the underside of a flat bottomed tank which has a 2 degree draft angle to the rear.
Flue gases exit the combustion chamber at the rear into channels running around the side and rear walls of the tank before exiting through a flue.
The appliance has an ignition electrode and a seperate flame detection electrode.
The flame appears to be stable (visibly) during the reduction and recovering flame current.
The appliance will lit correctly, the flame current will rise almost immediately to approx. 6.0 μA.
After 20-30 seconds, the flame current will start reducing over a 30-40 second period to just above the drop-out level of 1.0 μA
After approx. 30 seconds the flame current will start to increase and continue to above 6.0 μA. These appliances will then continue to run without fault.
This behaviour will continue on these units, so every morning from a cold start, same problem.
A basic description of the appliance is as follows:
A rectangular metal fibre burner, positioned 60 mm from the underside of a flat bottomed tank which has a 2 degree draft angle to the rear.
Flue gases exit the combustion chamber at the rear into channels running around the side and rear walls of the tank before exiting through a flue.
The appliance has an ignition electrode and a seperate flame detection electrode.
The flame appears to be stable (visibly) during the reduction and recovering flame current.