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Is the right burner on my Carrier oil furnace?

Brian26
Brian26 Member Posts: 26
edited January 2018 in Oil Heating
From what it looks like on the model number sticker it should have a Reillo 40-BF5? It currently has a Beckett NX-56LQ on it with a .60 60a nozzle at 145 psi that's on the mfg setting sticker on the bruner. It runs fine but was curious if it was specially made for the Reillo burner as the last 2 or 3 digits on the model seem to indicate the burner type? Mine end in BF for the BF5 burner? Shouldn't mine end in BNX with the beckett burner? I attached pictures of the model number tag and burner on it now.




Comments

  • STEVEusaPA
    STEVEusaPA Member Posts: 6,506
    It's fine. It's giving you set up instructions of 3 configurations for each of the 2 different btu outputs.
    steve
  • Brian26
    Brian26 Member Posts: 26
    Anyone know why the listed max pressure is 160 psi on the furnace label? I bumped the pressure to 175 to get the max firing rate of .80 off my .60 nozzle. It lights off like a rocket now but seem to run with better efficiency. I am doing a smoke test and using a combustion analyzer to make these adjustments.

    Also, is it better to set the oxygen on the low side. The carrier manual says the target is 3.5-5 and 12-13 co2. I get much lower stack temps, higher duct temp rises and better efficiency at the 3-3.5 o2 level. I could go even lower on the 02 and still not get a trace of smoke. Could i drop it down to say 2-2.5 o2?
  • STEVEusaPA
    STEVEusaPA Member Posts: 6,506
    edited February 2018
    I guess they are giving you a way to tweak your combustion.
    I'd bring that pressure back down to 145 (look at the label on the back of the burner), and a .60 60A nozzle.
    What were your numbers before you made changes?
    For setting the burner, proper draft first. Then true zero smoke. Then I usually add enough air to drop the CO2 1%, and that's where it should be. I don't really worry about the final CO2 or O2 numbers, unless they are out of whack. Then I'll start investigating.
    What's your net stack temp? Too low and your condensing, and condensing will do more damage and become more costly than a few efficiency percentage points.
    steve
  • SuperTech
    SuperTech Member Posts: 2,140
    I would be very, very careful with that furnace. You have the correct NX burner, but be careful about setting that air too low. I've seen quite a few techs set them up like that only to have the furnace soot up afterwards. And draft is super important.

    Honestly I would shoot for 5-6% O2 and no more than 12% CO2. CO should be close to zero PPM.
  • unclejohn
    unclejohn Member Posts: 1,833
    As far as I can see the "B" is for Beckett and a NX is what you have. The "R" is for Reillo and is what you don't have