The system is producing unwanted vacuum
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Published
July 10, 2009
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If there's a sag in the main that fills with condensate, it may be enough to stop the air from reentering the system. If the vacuum is deep enough, it can make the water in the boiler surge up and down. Check the pitch of the pipes with a line level.
Insulate all the steam pipes.
Install a vacuum breaker in the boiler or the near-boiler piping. Make sure you pipe the vacuum breaker between the boiler water line and the motorized valve.
The Dead Men used that vacuum to their advantage because in a vacuum, water will boil at a lower temperature. As the coal pile burned down, the energy entering the water lessened. But since the system was in a vacuum, the boiler could still make steam, although it had less fire to work with.
This type of vacuum vent does not work well in an oil- or gas-fired system, however, because the vacuum forms too quickly. Air that can't make its way out on the first cycle will expand greatly and block the flow of the steam to parts of the system.
If you run into this type of vacuum-inducing air vent, replace it with a standard air vent.



