A UL certification is a UL certification. Your insurance company will/should recognize it as such... anyways, after googling it, I come up with 2 locations:
Guardian Fire Testing Laboratories
474 Hinman Ave.
Buffalo, NY 14216
Tel: 716-877-2760
Fax: 716-835-5682
R. Joseph Pearson
[email protected]
(broken link removed)
and:
GUARDIAN FIRE TESTING LABORATORIES
15 Wenonah Ter.
Tonawanda , NY 14150
I'll include a copy of the UL certification for you here.
The combo units are great running units with a completely seperate chamber for the fuel and for the wood.
When ordering the gas model, just specify either LP or Natural. All the wood settings are the same as any normal Biomass boiler in that respect. The nicest part is being able to use one chimney and the fossil fuel automatically taking over when the wood has been exhausted.
Also, for those trying to figure out how to adjust the openings for the primary and secondaries... just use a popsicle stick. Two sticks thick for the primaries and one stick thick for the secondaries.
Each system needs to be fine tuned for each application. Weed dryness makes a great deal of difference when trying to set the initial air setting on the blower of the pie opening. The higher the moisture content the larger the opening. You will find yourself changing the air opening during the winter months as your wood continues to dry. You'll also fing that wood that sets next to the boiler is dryer than it was when you brought it in. I read on another thread where a gentleman was ready to toss his boiler out because he couldn't get it to burn worth a darn. He spent probably upwards of $15,000 on his system with storage and couldn't figure out how to get ahead on his wood supply to burn anything other than green wood that he cut last week. Willing to throw the baby out with the bathwater I guess. Perhaps a couple of thousand saved from someplece else and he would be able to plan ahead and get a year of two ahead on his wood supply. Dry wood is the key, dry wood is the key, dry wood is the key!!.... Can't stress it enough!
On another note, if you're changing the temps that the pump comes on, remember to change the temp setting where the pump shuts off when the wood runs out. The factory setting is for the pump to start up @ 144* and for it to shut off at 4* lower. The factory intends for this to be @ 140*. If you don't change this setback and change the pump start up temp setting to 165*.... and the pump will be shutting off @ 161*. You probably don't want that. You can change the temp setting for pump shut down easily. I would suggest shutting the pump down @ 140*, although the nature of the central heating system you have, along with it's temperature requirements for heating is going to vary greatly depending on whether you have a radiator, baseboard fin tube system, heat exchanger in a hot air system, or a radiant system (not to mention a storage system which changes the nature of the beast entirely!) all serve to delegate the temps best for any particular system. Just change the parameter from the factory set "Ph 4" to the degree of setback you want. If you have a set point pump launch of 165* and desire pump to shut off at 140* you need to change it to "Ph 25" which is 25* less than the launch temp of 165*.
At least the temps broke for now and it's a balmy 26*! I can wear shorts outside now! Ah.... good camping weather anyways..... ;-)