DougM
02-19-2013, 09:34 AM
I've been looking through old posts for an answer or similar situation and haven't found anything, so I'll throw this out for comments.
We have a wood-fired 30"x8' raised-flue D&G evaporator with a full-length-hood. Due to our building setup we have the stack routed out through the wall - I know, not the best. Anyway, at the end of last year we found out the elbows reduced our effective length more than we first thought, so we lengthened the vertical section to compensate, and to replace some worn-out sections.
This has increased our gph significantly, but we are consistently boiling over the back pan if we get the stack temp over about 450 degrees. I'm seeing old posts with 900-1000 degree stack temps, I think we'd float the hood off the evaporator if we got that hot. At 350-400 we have a consistent violent boil in the sap pan, but above that large bubbles start to form & it boils up into the hood.
Syrup quality & color are not an issue, we're just getting nowhere with eliminating the boiling over. Some posts I saw mentioned using defoamer every few minutes, if that's all it takes that's an easy fix, but if anyone knows another potential cause or something we need to change we're open to suggestions.
Thanks,
Doug
We have a wood-fired 30"x8' raised-flue D&G evaporator with a full-length-hood. Due to our building setup we have the stack routed out through the wall - I know, not the best. Anyway, at the end of last year we found out the elbows reduced our effective length more than we first thought, so we lengthened the vertical section to compensate, and to replace some worn-out sections.
This has increased our gph significantly, but we are consistently boiling over the back pan if we get the stack temp over about 450 degrees. I'm seeing old posts with 900-1000 degree stack temps, I think we'd float the hood off the evaporator if we got that hot. At 350-400 we have a consistent violent boil in the sap pan, but above that large bubbles start to form & it boils up into the hood.
Syrup quality & color are not an issue, we're just getting nowhere with eliminating the boiling over. Some posts I saw mentioned using defoamer every few minutes, if that's all it takes that's an easy fix, but if anyone knows another potential cause or something we need to change we're open to suggestions.
Thanks,
Doug