coalkirk wrote:I have never been able to successfully burn buck in the vf3000. It will burn back into the hopper.
I can't believe these posts!
I have been running my VF3000 for 4 years winter and summer.
I am on long island heating a 2400 sqft ranch and no problems keeping the whole house at 71 degrees when it is 0 out.
I did have a few problems with it over the years.
one time I noticed the hot coals was not straight across , one side was full with hot coaals and the hot coals angled to nothing on the other side. (a little bit like yours looks)
I bailed out all the coal in the hopper into a empty garbage can, when I got down to the pusher I see a 3/4" round magic marker. all the paint was worn off from the pusher pushing it up towards the grate and it would roll back down when the pusher moved back, so no coal could drop down because the magic marker filled that space.
after that I installed a piece of chicken wire across the hopper to catch any junk mixed in with the coal.
over time it stopped some pieces of over sized coal and a golf ball sized rock.
So empty your hopper and see that you don't have something stuck in front of your pusher.
I also have a screen because of junk in my coal.
Now, as to your success in running it on Long Island, I bet you have all baseboard fin tube? I have noticed that with the fin tube and the toe-kick heaters, I can not appreciably reduce the temp of the water, so I reduce the flow. The radiant is set up as an injection system and gives the boiler plenty of time to recover. But when those big radiators in the basement call, all bets are off. My problem is to many kinds of radiation. I think the VF3000 suffers from not being able to get up and running soon enough and it cannot recover once it is down. At least mine wont. The trick is to put out hotter water in the severe weather and I like my backup boiler kicking in automatically at a preset temp. The only other option for me in Maine would be an outdoor reset/temp control to ramp it up automatically and I would like a wind direction and speed factor also. Back to running a rocketship instead of a boiler.![]()
Kevin
Hillside wrote:I want to thank everyone for there help so far... as of now as long as I sift the fines off the coal it has been working but the temps up til now have been above what I was having problems at. So when the temps drop I will let everyone know how it is working..
syncmaster wrote:
I also have a screen because of junk in my coal.
Now, as to your success in running it on Long Island, I bet you have all baseboard fin tube? I have noticed that with the fin tube and the toe-kick heaters, I can not appreciably reduce the temp of the water, so I reduce the flow. The radiant is set up as an injection system and gives the boiler plenty of time to recover. But when those big radiators in the basement call, all bets are off. My problem is to many kinds of radiation. I think the VF3000 suffers from not being able to get up and running soon enough and it cannot recover once it is down. At least mine wont. The trick is to put out hotter water in the severe weather and I like my backup boiler kicking in automatically at a preset temp. The only other option for me in Maine would be an outdoor reset/temp control to ramp it up automatically and I would like a wind direction and speed factor also. Back to running a rocketship instead of a boiler.![]()
Kevin
yes, I have baseboard fin tube. Reading your question jogged my memory....when I first installed the vf3000 and the outside temp was around 20 degrees , I some times heard complaints that there isn't enough hot water for showers.
I realized that the vf3000 dosen't have a lo limit cutoff which shuts down the circulator when the boiler water temp gets below a certain point.
so I went on ebay and bought another johnson S350 and plugged it into the side of the 3 johnson controlers supplied with the VF3000. I set the extra s350 to open when the temp falls below 155 degrees. That extra s350 opens the common wires to the zone valves. so now the vf3000 water temp dosen't fall below 155degrees so I can make DHW all the time.
the VF3k starts stoaking when the boiler temp is below 160 , at 155 the zone valves are disabled but not the zone valve for DHW ( the boiler water is still hot enough to make DHW)
when the coal fire builds and the boiler temp gets above 155 the heating zone valves are enabled.
This set up might help you, just disable your baseboard at 155 but let your radiant continue working.
Then when the boiler gets above 155 your baseboard will be enabled.
I will post a picture of my set up
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