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View Full Version : Fourth test boil was ultimately a success, but I have a few questions.



Swingpure
10-18-2021, 10:50 AM
I started my fourth and final boil test this morning at 8 am, the ambient temperature was 40° F (4° C) and there was a slight breeze. All went well, pans 1 and 2 (1 being closest to the door) boiled first and pan 3 was right behind and all 3 boiled vigorously throughout the test. Pan 4 was what the test was all about. It did come to a moderate boil, but it took an hour to do so. Near the end of the test I removed the pan and saw the two metal plates that were below it, that were designed to keep the flames from overheating the sides of the pans. Pan 4 was over the arch, so the fear of flames was very minimal, so I removed the two plates, stoked up the fire again and almost immediately pan 4 came to a vigorous boil. It did not boil quite as crazy as the other 3, but it had a good boil on it. Once I removed the plate, I could see flames running under pan 3 to under pan 4. The flames never went between the two pans.

Pan 5 was meant to be a preheat pan. The water got very hot and had bubbles in it, but did not boil.

Some questions:

I had my gas powered leaf blower and running at idle speed, it turned the firebox into an inferno, however, some flames and sparks came out from under the door and the draft out the stovepipe completely stopped. As soon as I removed the blower, the draft up the chimney started immediately up again. Is this supposed to happen? What I ultimately did, was to fire up the leaf blower for about 15 seconds or so, about a minute before I would add wood again.

With pans 1 to 3 running equally as hot and pan 4 boiling well, but not as well, would I take the sap from preheat pan 5 and put into pan 1 and then to 2 then 3 then 4?

While this is going on, I will have 2, 5 quart pots boiling on an induction stove near by. It comes to a boil about every 20 minutes. Which pan should I dump the boiling sap into, pan 1?

I did have some smoke come out between the blocks and the pan and between the door and the blocks. Definitely I will have to get gasket and ceramic blanket material to make the evaporator more air tight. I do have a call into CDL and they do have material in stock, so he will help me find the correct material for my application.

There was also some smoke coming out minor openings between the cinder blocks. I will tighten up those areas. Not sure if I should add some heat resistant caulking to any of the spaces between the blocks.

Three observations from the test, one is to have a chair nearby, two is you have be eagle eyed through the steam to make sure a pan’s sap level does not go too far down. I had one pan where the water level expectantly was low. I thought I had been watching for that, but with the steam, it can sneak up on you. The third is that the pans are heavy with liquid in them and they can slosh back and fourth in the pan. I will be sure to scoop it as much as I can before lifting it.

Thanks for any advice.

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berkshires
10-18-2021, 03:27 PM
I started my fourth and final boil test this morning at 8 am, the ambient temperature was 40° F (4° C) and there was a slight breeze. All went well, pans 1 and 2 (1 being closest to the door) boiled first and pan 3 was right behind and all 3 boiled vigorously throughout the test. Pan 4 was what the test was all about. It did come to a moderate boil, but it took an hour to do so. Near the end of the test I removed the pan and saw the two metal plates that were below it, that were designed to keep the flames from overheating the sides of the pans. Pan 4 was over the arch, so the fear of flames was very minimal, so I removed the two plates, stoked up the fire again and almost immediately pan 4 came to a vigorous boil. It did not boil quite as crazy as the other 3, but it had a good boil on it. Once I removed the plate, I could see flames running under pan 3 to under pan 4. The flames never went between the two pans.


LOL. Slowly eliminating the last few pieces of all that steel. Glad to hear it. Yeah, you want the hot gasses right on your pans - anything that gets in the way of that is going to reduce the heat transfer.




Some questions:

I had my gas powered leaf blower and running at idle speed, it turned the firebox into an inferno, however, some flames and sparks came out from under the door and the draft out the stovepipe completely stopped. As soon as I removed the blower, the draft up the chimney started immediately up again. Is this supposed to happen? What I ultimately did, was to fire up the leaf blower for about 15 seconds or so, about a minute before I would add wood again.

Makes no sense to me. If all that extra air wasn't going up the stovepipe, where was it going?



With pans 1 to 3 running equally as hot and pan 4 boiling well, but not as well, would I take the sap from preheat pan 5 and put into pan 1 and then to 2 then 3 then 4?


Exactly.


While this is going on, I will have 2, 5 quart pots boiling on an induction stove near by. It comes to a boil about every 20 minutes. Which pan should I dump the boiling sap into, pan 1?


What does that mean - "comes to a boil every 20 minutes"?

Gabe

Swingpure
10-18-2021, 04:52 PM
Makes no sense to me. If all that extra air wasn't going up the stovepipe, where was it going?

What does that mean - "comes to a boil every 20 minutes"?

Gabe

Lol, slowly the steel is going. The plate on the floor with the fire brick on top of it will stay. I still have three plates that three of the pans sit on, to help prevent the flames from going up the sides of the pans.


I think the air going in was hitting the flat back wall of the fire box and coming straight back and perhaps there was no extra capacity in the stovepipe to accept any of it. I talked to the CDL guy a little bit about it. I will just do what I did today, which is every once in a while, give it a shot of leaf blower air.

On the induction stove, it takes about 20 minutes to take cold water to a boil, just assuming sap would take a similar amount of time to boil, so if I was to dump the sap into one of the pans after 20 minutes, it would take me another 20 minutes to bring the next 10 quarts to a boil. Over the course of an hour, I would have brought to a boil 7.5 gallons of sap using the induction stove. That might meet all of my new sap requirements, but hopefully I will need a little more, which can come from my fifth pan.

Swingpure
10-18-2021, 05:26 PM
I spoke to the CDL guy about gaskets and ceramic fire blanket material. I had sent him pictures and told him what was going on.

He was not concerned too much about the smoke that was initially coming out the sides of the pans. It did stop as the draft really got going. He said I had a really good boil going on and also he said cinder block evaporators should not be totally airtight.

He did think I could use some fireproof material around the door and he had some that would be perfect for me.

Pdiamond
10-18-2021, 09:38 PM
Gary, We a sugar makers always keep in mind that no matter how well things are going you are always 10 seconds aay from disaster at any time you are boiling sap. That is why it is so important to be there watching everything when you are boiling. It's that short time when you may step away that something could happen and then it could just steam roll on you.

Swingpure
10-18-2021, 10:18 PM
Gary, We a sugar makers always keep in mind that no matter how well things are going you are always 10 seconds aay from disaster at any time you are boiling sap. That is why it is so important to be there watching everything when you are boiling. It's that short time when you may step away that something could happen and then it could just steam roll on you.

Thanks. On a very small scale, I had an appreciation for that today, when the one pan got low on water. I was standing beside them, but with all of the steam it was hard to see the level in that pan. I did catch it, but I made a mental note about being super watchful.

One of my plans to help is that I will have all of the sap I plan to boil that day, in 5 gallon pails near the evaporator, (in snow banks) before I start the evaporator, to minimize any time away from the evaporator getting sap.

I am doing everything I can to be prepared for my rookie season, but I do appreciate that there will many unexpected things happen and I will just have to deal with them and learn from them. The first boil, finish and bottling will be very exciting, with lots to learn. The second boil, finish and bottling will be very exciting, with lots to learn. The third …..

buckeye gold
10-19-2021, 04:37 AM
My 2 cents. Keep the air going on the fire and stoke it up. There is basically no such thing as too hot. Being a block arch that may not be totally true though. I'd consider some arch board over the block on the sides. The picture with your stack shows dark smoke coming out, that is incomplete combustion. When your fire is ripping there should no smoke only heat waves.

When your adding sap, don't add a bunch just dip a little in every once in a while. That way you keep your boil going more. If you can rig a trickle feed it would help. That's how float boxes work, they allow what is steamig off to slowly work into the pan, so you mainntain a boil.

If you burn your fire hot with the blower your blocks will be destroyed by season's end. Cinder blocks were never meant for high heat.

DrTimPerkins
10-19-2021, 07:21 AM
1. Using brick or fireboard, add a small section of ramp to the end nearest the stovepipe to help direct the exhaust/air upward instead of hitting the flat back of the arch and scattering around and coming out everywhere.
2. Adding air is good, as long as you do #1. Maybe you're adding too much for your current setup. Can you throttle back a little?
3. Pan gasket between your pans and arch will help quite a bit. If you're getting too much air leakage from between your block, a little fireboard should help.

Realistically, you could do those things...or just grab your chair and a beer and use up more wood and time. At some point you need to either relax and enjoy boiling, or you'll end up convincing yourself you need a real evaporator. So your choice becomes spend it in beer or spend it on an evaporator. :D

mainebackswoodssyrup
10-19-2021, 07:38 AM
Realistically, you could do those things...or just grab your chair and a beer and use up more wood and time. At some point you need to either relax and enjoy boiling, or you'll end up convincing yourself you need a real evaporator. So your choice becomes spend it in beer or spend it on an evaporator. :D

Conversely, when we upgraded our evaporator it made drinking beer easier. Went from wood to oil so boiling is kind of boring (not complaining- that's what it is when things are going good). So, I've managed to spend money on the evaporator and increase my beer consumption.:rolleyes: Perhaps the time saved in boiling offsets some of the beers. :lol: In any event, at the hobbyist level I'm convinced making syrup is for two type of people:
1) The frugal type that likes to invent and make their own evaporators, RO's and efficiency improvements then watch them work.
2) The type that likes to spend money on shiny stainless things.

Swingpure
10-19-2021, 08:24 AM
The picture with your stack shows dark smoke coming out, that is incomplete combustion. When your fire is ripping there should no smoke only heat waves.
.

Thanks, I will watch what comes out of the stack. I have to smile at myself though, I had to search through a bunch of pictures to find one with visible smoke coming out, to show the draft was working. Almost all of the time it was either just heat waves or light smoke.

I do not want to destroy my cinderblocks, so I will stick with my 15 second shot of air every five minutes or so, about a minute or so of adding more wood.

Thanks

Gary

Swingpure
10-19-2021, 08:58 AM
1. Using brick or fireboard, add a small section of ramp to the end nearest the stovepipe to help direct the exhaust/air upward instead of hitting the flat back of the arch and scattering around and coming out everywhere.
2. Adding air is good, as long as you do #1. Maybe you're adding too much for your current setup. Can you throttle back a little?
3. Pan gasket between your pans and arch will help quite a bit. If you're getting too much air leakage from between your block, a little fireboard should help.

Realistically, you could do those things...or just grab your chair and a beer and use up more wood and time. At some point you need to either relax and enjoy boiling, or you'll end up convincing yourself you need a real evaporator. So your choice becomes spend it in beer or spend it on an evaporator. :D

The bottom of my stovepipe is right even with the horizontal flat part of my ramp.

Once things got going, there was very little coming out between the pans and the walls. I cannot imagine the pans boiling much more than they were.

Cinderblock evaporators have their limitations, however as mainebackswoodssyrup said, there is a certain enjoyment and satisfaction building your own and making it work. I think I added a few features to mine, that I have not seen on other cinderblock evaporators.

Having said that, I do appreciate any advice to improve what I have. A professional evaporator is not in the immediate future.

This year will be a giant learning curve. I will learn real world how many gallons per hour my evaporator will boil, I will learn if I can handle all of the sap my taps produce, how good I am at boiling and finishing, because I want to make Grade A syrup. I will learn just how much work it is and if I am at the right number of taps, or if I reduce down to just to 20 buckets.

It will be a fun ride and it will be done with an evaporator I made.

I do appreciate all of the advice and I will see if I can get some material to better seal up around the pans.

berkshires
10-19-2021, 11:59 AM
Thanks for the clarification. I guess if you want to use the induction pots, I would just use them to add a little more GPH.

So I would ladle from your preheated into pan one, and both induction pots. Then ladle from 1 to 2, 2 to 3, etc.

You'll wind up making syrup in pan 4 and your two induction pots.

GO