Dyno Test Your Boiler

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eauzonedan

Member
Jan 21, 2011
105
Bayfield Co. Wi
This is an offshoot from the Sweet Spot discussion and something I've been wanting to do for quite a while. I would like to get a handle on just what kind of real world efficiency people are seeing with their boilers. I know the manufacturers publish all kinds of stuff...…… but I always take that kind of thing with a grain of salt and would like to see some real world numbers by real world people on the various units out there. My goal is to compile a list of the ability of various boilers to heat water...….. that IS what it's all about.
In the race car world the best test of your labor was to park the completed vehicle on a dyno and after all the bragging and bs'n was done...…… see what kind of power you put out to the tires. If you have storage on your system we can perform the same test by measuring the amount of energy we create from how much wood we burn. I would therefore like to throw down the furnace mitt and challenge all to bare their souls and divulge their numbers.

Ground rules are as follows:

Measure the weight in pounds of the wood you burn to raise your storage a given amount. I've got an old farm scale I picked up for about 50$ and have it by the boiler door for use when I load.

Be cautious about how you measure your storage temps as in my system I see 40+ degrees of stratification in my tank during draw down. You either need to mix completely - or have multiple temp sensors to get a real number on the amount of energy in the tank. I use 3 in-tank sensors hanging at the vertical quarter points and double count the middle one as it represents twice as much water volume as the other two. My experience with the Garn says that the only thing the single point temp reading from the factory sensor is good for - is an after burn value as that's is the only time there is minimal stratification.. Their readings during draw down are pretty much worthless - and I assume this to be true for most other storage situations.

For this venture we will ignore outdoor (combustion air) temps and I understand that will impact the accuracy. I assume none of us are burning in FL and we should all be looking at some similar conditions.

For this venture we will ignore wood MC as we're all big kids and none of us would be throwing 4' long sticks of green poplar in our units.

I don't think anyone with less than a couple hundred gallons of storage will be able to come up with relevant data as dynamic heat losses start to become become too large.

You need to shut down any emitters when you do this test as we can't measure any energy lost to your emitters during the test cycle. Something like the Garns kick out a couple hundred thou btu during a burn and minor losses to emitters would be much less significant than a smaller output boiler producing a fraction of that burn rate. Either way...…… try to minimize any emitter or other system heat losses during the burn as the goal is to measure the amount of energy we get to the storage tank.

For this venture we'll assume a storage temp rise from something in the range of 120 - 140 to about 180. If you cherry pick your range to the low side you should be able to improve your efficiency number - but that's not what this is about.

My Numbers:

I use 2.4 lb of wood to raise my 1500 gal of storage one degree or .0016 lb to raise one gallon a single degree. That 2.4 value is based on measuring most loads over the 4+ years of my system being in service. Using rough numbers for the btu per lb of wood I estimate that gets me somewhere about 80% efficient - but maybe somebody with a sharper pencil would like to put together a spread sheet after we get a few numbers so we could compare numbers that way. TCaldwell threw out a 3 lb number for his 2000 gal Garn in the Sweet Spot discussion and after adjusting for the difference in tank volume I was feeling inadequate as I was about 6% lower in my ability to convert lbs of wood to hot water. I then looked at the Garn specs and note that the 1500 is a couple feet shorter and each of the 5 - boiler tube passes thru the tank are shorter. Bottom line is there is less contact between the water and the exhaust tubes. Garn says the 2000 is supposed to be about 7% more efficient than my 1500 and my manhood was restored!

Should be fun. Might be neat to see pellet numbers also? Appreciate your inputs Dan
 
@eauzonedan I will not be able to participate for a few days until I get my big storage installed, currently only have about 600 gal total system but changing over to a 1500gal single storage tank hope to complete by the end of the day new years day. It will be interesting to see how my homemade boiler stacks up to some
 
Seat of the pants dyno results:
I figure I am close to my rated 40KW rating. House is warm, tanks are semi charged, all is good.
3 loads in the chamber in a row and I shut down and idle.
One fire every other day until december, one fire every day intermittently since then. I am happy.
 
I have done the "dyno" test for my system. If you search this forum using "boiler efficiency" and posts by me you will find lots of info, including assumptions and methodology. In general the result for my system comes in at low 80% range for btus to storage and upper mid range 80% when losses to the heated space are considered. This is a useful and fun exercise for anyone with a wood boiler/storage system.

This is one post resulting from that search:
https://www.hearth.com/talk/threads/boiler-efficiency-and-wood-use.103839/#post-1346417
 
On my system I'm heating 750 gallons of pressurized storage via a FPHX from an open homemade OWB. I burned 60-70 pounds of ash, maple, and a little catalpa. I raised my storage from an average of 124° to 162°F. I take the average from my 9 temp sensors on my storage because it's 3 tanks stacked. I can't say when the burn stopped but I checked it 4 hours after starting the fire and it was out so I'll say 4 hours for argument sake.

So that's....

750 gallons
60-70 pounds of wood
38° rise in temperature
4 hours time

Is this good or bad?
 
"Good" meaning more efficient and "bad" meaning less efficient, based on warno's numbers, this is the computation:
1) One pound of wood has available 6050 btus, if at 20% MC and stack temperature of 400F.
2) One gallon of water weighs 8.34 lbs.
3) One btu will raise one pound of water one degree F.
4) Btus to raise warno's 750 gallons one degree F = 750 x 8.34 = 6255 btus.
5) Btus to raise 750 gal 38F = 6255 x 38 = 237,690 btus.
6) Available wood energy in 65 lbs of wood = 6050 x 65 = 393,250 btus.
7) Efficiency = 237,690 / 393,250 = 60%.

This efficiency calculation is very raw and based on many assumptions.
 
@jebatty and @TCaldwell have both done some really nice work on this front.

When I first installed my system I did a couple of runs and got numbers in the 80% range. I pretty quickly realized that these measurements are very sensitive to any number of factors. One is simply pipe insulation on your boiler to tank piping. I did some research on this, and found some rough numbers like 100 btu/hr/ft of piping. So even if you have like 6 feet of piping, which is about as short as I could think it to be for a gasser, you'd be loosing 2400 btus over a 4 hour burn, which comes to something like 1% error.

As @jebatty says, there are assumptions.

The other major assumption in my system is the actual energy stored in the tank. I have more storage than I can charge with a single firing of the boiler, so I always have cool water at the bottom of the tank after a single burn. How to calculate the energy in said tank? Like most people, I use some average of temperatures along the tank's vertical direction. Since my tank is vertically oriented, I have 6 sensors and I use some simple math to calculate the energy in each segment of tank water. On a gross scale, this works just fine. But it makes a lot of assumptions, especially on the tank segment where the thermocline is located. I recently put in a couple more radiators and I thought this would be a good time to turn off circulation from the boilerhouse to the house emitters to check tank loss. Even this measurement is tricky. Below is my tank btus (relative to something, I think 0 degrees) over a 4 hour period:

upload_2018-12-23_7-45-33.png


When I went back and looked at the raw data, some temperature sensors were actually increasing in value during the time when the tank was increasing in BTU value. I assume this is because the water in the tank is settling, and water on the outside of the tank is cooling and settling to the bottom of the tank. That is, there is mixing even when there is no draw from the storage tank. I know @jebatty has mentioned this effect in one of his posts on storage loss.

FWIW, I'm using Tekmar 071 NTC sensors and the EasyIO controller to datalog the temperature measurements.

One could argue that a solution is to burn batches of wood back-to-back getting a hot reload. I do this when It's really cold out, and find that a 1.5 firebox load of wood produces way more energy to storage than 1.5 times the energy from a single batch of wood. I attribute this to the greater system efficiency for the 2nd hot reload burn. The boiler is already up to temperature and you're loading wood onto hot coals. The boiler only heats up once and cools off once.

I'm still working on better pipe insulation for the boiler to storage loop, and will report back when I have some better data.

Until then, enjoy the dyno-test challenge!
 
One could argue that a solution is to burn batches of wood back-to-back getting a hot reload. I do this when It's really cold out, and find that a 1.5 firebox load of wood produces way more energy to storage than 1.5 times the energy from a single batch of wood. I attribute this to the greater system efficiency for the 2nd hot reload burn. The boiler is already up to temperature and you're loading wood onto hot coals. The boiler only heats up once and cools off once.

This is exactly how I do my burns. I start a small fire with a few splits then go back and add more wood on top of the coal bed. It seems to work really well for me.
 
So here are my numbers. Disclaimer, I didn't isolate my storage, but I know my house uses 24k btu/hour with today's temps and lack of sun. Eko 60. 1000 gallons storage. 120 pounds put 50 degrees in my storage and heated the house for 7 hours. So...

50*8.34*1000 = 417,000

24k*7 = 168,000

168,000 + 417,000 = 585,000

120 * 6050 = 726,000

585,000 / 726,000 = 0.805 or 80%