RI 6144 Performance Of A Losch Anthracite Stoker In Building-Heating Service ? Summary And Conclusions

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
R. F. Tenney
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
50
File Size:
16726 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1963

Abstract

No detailed information has been published heretofore on the performance of small industrial-type anthracite stokers in building-heating service, apparently because of the difficulty of comparing the performance of one unit with that of another over an entire season's operation. Studies of competitive heating fuels have been similarly handicapped, and attempts to compare fuels are seldom technically sound in this investigation, the performance of a 60-in. Losch4 stoker burning rice-size anthracite in a standard commercial boiler was observed during a 4-month winter-spring season. It was used to heat two buildings at the Bureau of Mines' Anthracite Research Center at Schuylkill Haven, Pa., with the customary type of automatic pressure-range control. Attendance was limited to inspecting, fuel weighing, data recording, and ash removal. Results were computed daily and grouped by weekly periods to minimize daily irregularities. The same stoker-boiler unit had already been tested in a series of American Society of Mechanical Engineers (ASME) test code runs, with the stoker running continuously and with other conditions well stabilized A comparison of results from the code test and the building-heating tests provided information not available in the past for a single stoker unit, assisted in analyzing heat losses not computable in a cyclic operation, and established a basis for evaluating stoker performance in heating service.
Citation

APA: R. F. Tenney  (1963)  RI 6144 Performance Of A Losch Anthracite Stoker In Building-Heating Service ? Summary And Conclusions

MLA: R. F. Tenney RI 6144 Performance Of A Losch Anthracite Stoker In Building-Heating Service ? Summary And Conclusions. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1963.

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