Engineering Bulletin No 1: Boiler and?by Rufus T. Strohm
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Furnace Testing, by Rufus T. Strohm This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
Title: Engineering Bulletin No 1: Boiler and Furnace Testing
Author: Rufus T. Strohm
Release Date: December 20, 2006 [EBook #20146]
Language: English
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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UNITED STATES FUEL ADMINISTRATION BUREAU OF CONSERVATION
Engineering Bulletin No. 1
BOILER AND FURNACE TESTING
Prepared by
Rufus T. Strohm Associate Editor, Power
[Illustration: Maximum Production
Minimum Waste]
WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1918
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MAXIMUM PRODUCTION.
MINIMUM WASTE.
The United States Fuel Administration is making every effort, through the producers and transportation lines, to obtain an adequate supply of fuel for the industries of the country.
Twenty-five to fifty million tons of coal a year can be saved by the improved operation of steam-power plants without changing their present equipment and without abating their production the slightest.
It is absolutely necessary that this saving be realized, if our overburdened railroads are to be relieved and our industries kept in full operation.
The extent to which it will be realized depends upon the cooperation of the owners, engineers, and firemen of every power plant of the country.
YOUR FIRING LINE IS AT THE FURNACE DOOR.
DAVID MOFFAT MYERS, Advisory Engineer to United States Fuel Administration.
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BOILER AND FURNACE TESTING.
By RUFUS T. STROHM.
NECESSITY FOR TESTING BOILERS.
A boiler test is necessary in order to determine how well the boiler is doing the work expected of it; that is to say, we must find out whether we are wasting coal in making steam and how much this waste may be. Such a test may be made to discover the efficiency of the boiler, or the quantity of water it is evaporating, or the cost of evaporating 1,000 pounds of water.
The United States Fuel Administration recommends that every boiler plant have some means of daily checking the efficiency of the boiler and furnace. The simplest and best way of finding out how efficiently the boiler is working is to make an evaporation test, as described in this bulletin. All the necessary records can be made automatically with suitable instruments, although in many small plants the coal must be weighed on ordinary scales. The efficiency of the furnace can be found by making analyses of the flue gases. (See Bulletin No. 2 of the United States Fuel Administration.)
Too many engineers and firemen have the idea that they are not fitted to make boiler tests. This is altogether wrong. Any man who can weigh water and coal and read steam gages and thermometers is able to do the work required in making a boiler test for evaporation or efficiency. Such a test requires a knowledge of the following:
1. The total weight of coal used.
2. [1]The total weight of water fed to and evaporated by the boiler.
3. The average temperature of the feed water.
4. The average steam pressure in the boiler.
If these four items are known, a series of simple calculations will show how much water is being evaporated per pound of coal, and the efficiency of the boiler and furnace.
To make a test, the following apparatus and instruments are necessary:
1. Scales to weigh the coal.
2. Apparatus to weigh or measure the feed water.
3. Thermometers to take feed-water temperature.
4. Gages to indicate steam pressure.
A boiler test to be of value should extend over a period of at least eight hours. The longer the test the more accurate the results.
[Footnote 1: For the sake of simplicity, only the essential elements of boiler and furnace testing are treated in this bulletin. For rules covering the refinements for an exhaustive test, the reader is referred to the boiler test code of the American Society of Mechanical Engineers. Copies of this code can be obtained from the secretary, 29 West Thirty-ninth Street, New York City.]
WEIGHING THE COAL.
The weight of coal used during a test may easily be found by using an ordinary wheelbarrow and a platform scales, arranged as in figure 1. At each side of the scales build an incline with its top level with the top of the platform, but take care not to have either one touch the platform. Set the empty wheelbarrow on the scales, run the movable weight or poise out until it exactly balances the weight of the barrow and lock it in position with the thumbscrew.
Next, put weights on the scale pan A to correspond to a net weight of 250 or 300 pounds of coal. Fill the barrow with coal, run it on the scales, and add coal or
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