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How To Maintain An Oil Burning Furnace
Oil burning furnaces need maintenance, more than gas or propane
burning furnaces need. My own experience says you can go as long as 3
years without servicing it, but that is not advisable because sometimes
the failure that results is severe (electrode insulator cracks, and you
get the Bessemer Process on the electrode mount, which is to say, it
melts). You are far better off cleaning them annually.
Cleaning and servicing them is no big deal, but it is messy since that
soot is tarry and stinky.
Turn off power to the system. Remove the oil burner assembly, which will
also have the electrodes on it. How you remove this assembly is very
dependent on the particular unit; follow the oil line out of the pump to
where it goes into the furnace housing and that will give you a good
clue. Often (usually) you have to either remove or hinge back the high
voltage transformer to get at this assembly.
When you have the burner out, remove the nozzle and replace it. Make
sure you replace it with a nozzle with the same spray pattern, though
you can vary the gallons per hour (GPH) rating to rate the furnace up or
down in capacity.
Spray patterns are described as either solid, semisolid, or hollow -
which refers to the distribution of oil in the spray cone, and have a
specific angle which defines the angle of the cone of oil that is shot
into the furnace. Solid is the most common pattern in my experience and
85 degrees is the most common angle that I have seen.
Wipe the whole assembly down to get the oil and soot off of it. You will
need to position and gap the electrodes, but first do a visual
inspection of them. If there are visible cracks in the insulators,
replace them. If the ends are eroded and pitted, replace them. If in
doubt, replace them.
There is a special tool you need to position and gap the electrodes; do
not try to do this without that tool. It only costs about $4 at a supply
house; I repeat DO NOT TRY TO DO IT WITHOUT THE TOOL!!!! You can have a
fire, and in the worst possible case, an explosion that wrecks the
furnace if you gap them badly enough. Make sure you gap and position the
electrodes to conform to the particular spray pattern of the nozzle.
When you have done all this, take a rag and wipe down the air passages
leading into the furnace. Wipe off the squirrel cage on the combustion
blower. Wipe off the oil pump, the transformer, and the electrodes on
the transformer. Also look for an optical flame sensor (some units have
them) and wipe it clean.
Reassemble the furnace and fire it off. The flame should start instantly
and quietly - no WHOOMP, no delays followed by a WHOOMP. If it is
adjusted right, it will just start, immediately and quietly.
You then need to adjust the air to the flame. Open the inspection port
so you can see the flame. Turn down the air until the flame becomes dull
yellow and smoky, then increase the air until the smoke just vanishes
and the flame "flower" is bright yellow. If the flame "flower" becomes
too lean, it will be very bright and tinged with blue. At this point,
you are sending too much air in and sending too much heat up the flue.
When the inspection port is closed, if the flame roars and the furnace
kind of "shudders" a bit, back off the air until that stops, then look
again in the inspection port to make sure the flame is not smoky.
When all this is done, allow the furnace to reach operating temperature,
then adjust the flue damper. The flue damper should swing freely and not
catch, either open or close. If you cannot achieve this, replace it.
When you have achieved this, adjust the damper so that it is swinging
about half open when the furnace is running and at temp. When the
furnace stops and the flue cools, the damper should swing shut on its
own.
Beyond this, oil the pump motor, oil the blower motor, change the
filters, tighten the belts, replace the oil filter, and you are done.
You could also test pump pressure but that does not change unless either
tampered with or if the pump is failing; I almost always ignore it.
Although this sounds like a lot, when you get good at it you will do it
end to end in 1/2 hour. You will also stink of fuel oil when you are
done, so wear old clothes.
Oh yes. Must not forget. You WILL spill a certain small amount of fuel
oil over the course of this; have some kitty litter (oil dry) available.
Jim Locker holds advanced degrees in physics, has
designed and developed computer systems and software for over 30 years,
was a landlord for 20 years running up to a couple of hundred
properties, and can build or fix just about anything. He presently works
as an independent computer systems consultant and works for Just So
Software, Inc. whose site is
http://www.softwareforlandlords.com
If you are looking for an Ohio furnace repair contractor, please call us today at 937-675-2982 or
complete our online
service request form
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