Quadrafire Castille- how to remove auger please

  • Active since 1995, Hearth.com is THE place on the internet for free information and advice about wood stoves, pellet stoves and other energy saving equipment.

    We strive to provide opinions, articles, discussions and history related to Hearth Products and in a more general sense, energy issues.

    We promote the EFFICIENT, RESPONSIBLE, CLEAN and SAFE use of all fuels, whether renewable or fossil.
Status
Not open for further replies.
Close the fuel control flapper in the hopper first. Removing the auger will not help on an over feed issue.

Eric
 
Yeah, Thank you I lowered all the way to the bottom first but no difference , the pot overflows after a 15 minutes or a half hour.

The auger was recently put in and someone said that overfeeding can be caused by poor draft or having the wrong auger installed.



Close the fuel control flapper in the hopper first. Removing the auger will not help on an over feed issue.

Eric
 
If the pot is filling with unburnt pellets that is an airflow issue.
1.) clean the exhaust and I do not mean tapping it, clean it. Remove the rear baffles and clean it.
2.) make sure the ashpan is sealing

Leave the auger alone.

Eric
 
Thank you Eric.
1. The stove has been taken apart and scrubbed clean. The holes in the pot, the cover for the fan removed ,brushed,and vacuumed out, the cubby holes in the back, the pipes taken down [they were 1/3 blocked with soot]. Draft was the main focus- to resolve that first, since that was the varialbe most controllable.
The stove actually ran fine until the old auger apparently stopped working according to repairman.
2. I assume ashpan refers to the cirular piece of metal that you pull to let ashes flow into the pan below.That looks snug enough as far as I can tell

The biggest thing I have learned here is the multitude of places that soot can hide . That may have been the reason the backflow sensor needed to be replaced.


Currently, the stove starts fine. Occasionally you have to push the feed button on the back at the very start.
Then it feeds pellets every second or so. In order to run it you have to turn off the thermostat for 10 minutes every 20 minutes or so in order to burn off the pellets piling up in the pot

If the pot is filling with unburnt pellets that is an airflow issue.
1.) clean the exhaust and I do not mean tapping it, clean it. Remove the rear baffles and clean it.
2.) make sure the ashpan is sealing

Leave the auger alone.

Eric
If the pot is filling with unburnt pellets that is an airflow issue.
1.) clean the exhaust and I do not mean tapping it, clean it. Remove the rear baffles and clean it.
2.) make sure the ashpan is sealing

Leave the auger alone.

Eric
 
I was monitoring the conversation. If the pellets are feeding every second or so, something is definitely wrong with the control. Is your control box clear or opaque? It should be running the auger once every 7 seconds or so. I was confused by the reference to sealing the ashpan too since the pan for the ashes is no where near being sealed! It's about as leaky as possible and makes an OAK a joke on one of these suckers! :) I remember reading a year or more ago about augers with different pitches or 'threads per inch'. It IS possible that they put the wrong one in but if it is true that it feeds every second, then you need to suspect the control box. I wonder if the service guy would swap yours out for another one just to see if that's the problem.

UPDATE: never mind on the clear box. I see from your earlier post that it's the old one. I can't believe how much they charged you for a snap disk! That's nuts!
 
  • Like
Reactions: QuadraMick
Have you applied a "patch cord" to the auger and counted the RPM's?

If the stove is used, it's possible a higher RPM auger was put in? Unlikely...... But possible.

The auger doesn't need removed to do so. But make sure the RPM is counted.

On start up, your auger spins for 60 seconds. So open hopper (empty and clean), turn stove on, then count the RPM's in that 60 sec start up feed.
 
  • Like
Reactions: QuadraMick
It's about as leaky as possible and makes an OAK a joke on one of these suckers! :)


If you have an oak connected to the stove w an opening to the outside do you think the suction is likely to take fresh air from there or depressurize the house and pull it through minuscule cracks around windows/doors?
 
Are you Positive its 2.4? Double checked? Always helps to eliminate the Human Error factor?

If you get 2.4 several times, then it is wrong. 2.0 for Quads as SLLS stated
 
  • Like
Reactions: QuadraMick
IMHO, the difference in rpm from 2 to 2.4 is NOT going to fill your burnpot
 
IMHO, the difference in rpm from 2 to 2.4 is NOT going to fill your burnpot

I agree with you.. Although

That would be a 20% increase if it was really 2.0... But it looks like it supposed to be 2.4 RPM anyways (that's the new replacement for old motors)

So back to the drawing board?!? Is the combustion blower reading full voltage when its running?

A weak or failing blower will slow things up a bit?
 
I agree with you.. Although

That would be a 20% increase if it was really 2.0... But it looks like it supposed to be 2.4 RPM anyways (that's the new replacement for old motors)

yep, 20% but still with a decent airflow as you say he should just get a healthy flame which could be throttled back with the gate. But if they are recommended them as replacements then like you also said, that's not the problem. If the pitch of the auger is for something else though that could pull a lot more pellets up the feed. I don't have a clue if other stoves use similar augers though. We're grasping at straws here for sure.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.