I have an EKO40, and I have the temperature set for 167. The boiler heats up without a problem, the fan shuts off. I return several hours later, and it is now 175-180. It remains there most of the day. The fan only seems to need to kick on
when a zone valve opens and the cooler water enters the boiler, but when it is idling, the temp is much higher than I have it set for. I checked the main air intakes, and they are set at 9mm, and the secondary intakes are also set at 3.5 turns,
just like the manual suggests. I will say that I am getting 17 hour burns out of a load of wood....that is nice....but it isn't burning very cleanly, I don't think. I have no thermal storage with the system, which stinks, but I don't have any room for tanks.
Any ideas why the temp continues to rise?
when a zone valve opens and the cooler water enters the boiler, but when it is idling, the temp is much higher than I have it set for. I checked the main air intakes, and they are set at 9mm, and the secondary intakes are also set at 3.5 turns,
just like the manual suggests. I will say that I am getting 17 hour burns out of a load of wood....that is nice....but it isn't burning very cleanly, I don't think. I have no thermal storage with the system, which stinks, but I don't have any room for tanks.
Any ideas why the temp continues to rise?
!! That tells me you dont have much heat load right now and your boiler is in idle mode all the time. Remember your fan purges air into the chamber in cycles, this in its self will ad air to fire box and cause temps to rise above your thermostat setting.
) . These shutdowns are from 2 hours all the way up to extended shutdowns of 16 hours. And, we've never even come cose to fully loading - probably 1/3 full has been the max so far. But our boiler and wood supply are in the basement, making frequent loading no problem at all. So the question is, do you have to fully load your EKO? If it's a long distance from the house, or no one is home during the day then you're up against it. The bottom line is that without storage, the more right-sized fires you can run (or no fires at all), the better off the boiler efficiency will be. The "good" news is that finally seasonably cold Weather has arrived, so your bigger loads will now have a place to go ;-).