Steam trap on boiler above water line
Has anyone seen this before? 1/2” Steam trap only slightly above water line tapped into a control plate. I assume the original installer was concerned about the boiler / system flooding? Peerless Lc-4.
This is a 12 unit apartment building in San Francisco. Of course the trap is slightly passing steam.
Comments
-
-
it does nothing. steam can't get down that pipe anyhow because of the water seal, unless there is a big differential between the main and return and the equalizer is supposed to take care of that.
oh, i see now, it is open, not connected to a return. it is probably a hack because the water is leaving the boiler and the auto feeder is overfilling the boiler during a cycle. it will kill the boiler if it is constantly dumping water.
1 -
A set-up similar to this has been done on systems with multiple boilers that insures that a down or shut down boiler will not flood. The down boiler or boilers will slowly fill due to steam above the water line condensing. A steam trap or a "liquid drainer" as it is called is installed slightly above the normal water line and the drain pipe is routed back to a condensate receiver or condensate tank so as to not loose the water. This way when that down boiler fires it's water level is close to normal.
2 -
Categories
- All Categories
- 87.4K THE MAIN WALL
- 3.3K A-C, Heat Pumps & Refrigeration
- 61 Biomass
- 430 Carbon Monoxide Awareness
- 122 Chimneys & Flues
- 2.1K Domestic Hot Water
- 5.9K Gas Heating
- 116 Geothermal
- 168 Indoor-Air Quality
- 3.8K Oil Heating
- 78 Pipe Deterioration
- 1K Plumbing
- 6.6K Radiant Heating
- 395 Solar
- 15.9K Strictly Steam
- 3.5K Thermostats and Controls
- 56 Water Quality
- 52 Industry Classes
- 50 Job Opportunities
- 18 Recall Announcements

