The system is losing water
Info
Published
July 10, 2009
Subscribe to RSS feed
If you can't see the pipes, suspect them. If they're very old, replace them.
If the system isn't well vented, the velocity of the escaping air will increase through whatever vents are working. High velocity air carries dirt toward the good vents and clogs them. If the vent can't close tightly because there's dirt in its seat, lots of steam will escape. You'll have make up that missing water at the boiler.
Make sure all your vents are working properly.
Get to the source of the water hammer and get rid of it.
You can't see it unless you're looking at the chimney. It looks like white smoke, but it's not smoke; it's water vapor. To check for a hole, flood the boiler up into the header piping. You'll know you have a problem if you see water pouring out of the boiler's jacket.
Check under the jacket for cracks in the boiler that may not be large enough to cause a flood on the floor. The water may be evaporating on the hot cast iron. Is it unusually humid in the boiler room? If it is, there may be a crack in the boiler. Check it out.
And by the way, if the boiler is leaking, don't' try to fix it with dope. That stuff may stop the leak, but it will also contaminate the water to a point where the boiler will produce nothing but wet steam. You can't heat a building with wet steam.
Be smart and pipe your steam boilers with threaded steel instead of copper.



