Bemis
09-30-2010, 09:27 PM
I tried the typical preheater design last year. 20 feet of 3/8" tubing wrapped tightly around the stack and shielded/insulated. It worked okay, but I really only got 30 or so degree of temperature rise. I'm moving up to a 4x2 pan this year, so I'm hoping to do a little better on the pre-heater.
Here's my idea. I'm hoping for comments. Maybe I'll scan in a sketch tomorrow.
I have a 6" stack coming out of the arch. I'm thinking I'll install a 6" wye near the base of the stack to divert some flow. I'll have a damper on the main stack and on the wye. I might reduce it to 4" after the wye. My pre-heater coil would be installed inside the duct of the stack bypass. I should be able to roughly control flue gas so as to not overheat the coil to the point of boiling at the flowrate I'm running. I'd monitor sap outlet temperature and adjust as needed to get closer to boiling.
I think there will be no problem in getting enough heat. I'm only worried about vapor lock if things get out of hand. I good damper strategy should help that.
Anyone tried this before? Any thoughts.
Here's my idea. I'm hoping for comments. Maybe I'll scan in a sketch tomorrow.
I have a 6" stack coming out of the arch. I'm thinking I'll install a 6" wye near the base of the stack to divert some flow. I'll have a damper on the main stack and on the wye. I might reduce it to 4" after the wye. My pre-heater coil would be installed inside the duct of the stack bypass. I should be able to roughly control flue gas so as to not overheat the coil to the point of boiling at the flowrate I'm running. I'd monitor sap outlet temperature and adjust as needed to get closer to boiling.
I think there will be no problem in getting enough heat. I'm only worried about vapor lock if things get out of hand. I good damper strategy should help that.
Anyone tried this before? Any thoughts.