We have a Beckett oil burner and, I would like to know how is the Nozzle size on the burner determined ? Your videos are a great help in maintaining our oil burner..
VMK The Forest Hermit it’s based on the BTUs required to heat the water in the boiler to proper temperature. Boilers are sized based on heat loss calculations of the house and climate. Different burners require different spray patterns from the nozzles. The GPM is rated at 100 psi but if you raise the pump pressure you get better atomization. so you can get more oil out of a smaller nozzle. Go to Hago’s website the make nozzles
That water heater was made by phase 3 which I believe I could be wrong got bought by triangle tube or was made by triangle tube I remember seeing the phase 3 ones in 2000 when I started this trade, 20 years with the same company.
Is it that time of the year already Steve. Business is going to start going from AC’s to boilers. In AZ, we are still using our AC’s all day and night.
It's getting to that time of year where his jobs are going to become shit shows. Fixing air conditioning is not as complex as hot water heaters and oil burners. Get ready for crusty ones Steven, Mr. Grinch might be coming out early with the winter they are forecasting. I noticed that when you were changing the nozzles you didn't take a screwdriver and twirl it inside the nozzle compartment.
Matthew Kowal the retention head is part of the nozzle on this one (the finned looking part he took off before removing the nozzle). The ones he sticks the screwdriver in have the retention attached to the end of the air tube.
@@erikj.2066 What is the purpose of sticking the screwdriver into where the retention head is attached to the end of the air tube? Learning from your comment, I now know that the retention head is the part that he sprayed. For a model of that kind, it's been a while since I saw that much air purged out of the oil line. That beast is full of soot from the looks of that.
Matthew Kowal the screwdriver on the fixed head type checks if the head is broken, or missing. I don’t think he purged all of the air out of the filter he changed, so that’s why it takes a few to eliminate the air. At the end he used a draft meter, and found negative draft, meaning there shouldn’t be much soot or restrictions in the boiler sections.
@@erikj.2066 Either way, Steven is a unique guy dedicated to getting the job done. He leaves no stone unturned, and goes beyond the code so that your systems last longer than expected. Not to mention he can't stress enough to get your system serviced every year regularly.
I wonder what hacker put that unit in using ProPress and it looks to me everything is corroded and I do have to add in what a shitshow. Peace brother and Molly
I had our oil furnace & AC service same company for 17 years. Everything was working fine until he touched it. "He asked me are you having problems with primary relay"? I said no. I think somehow he short it my primarily any charge me $185.00 plus 95.00 total $280.00 It was working fine before he came that's my argument. Thinking about finding another company.
H B he might have tested the primary relay and the safety didn’t trip after 15 seconds. That’s one reason that it would “be fine before he touched it” and then he saw it was bad.
We have a Beckett oil burner and, I would like to know how is the Nozzle size on the burner determined ? Your videos are a great help in maintaining our oil burner..
VMK The Forest Hermit it’s based on the BTUs required to heat the water in the boiler to proper temperature. Boilers are sized based on heat loss calculations of the house and climate. Different burners require different spray patterns from the nozzles. The GPM is rated at 100 psi but if you raise the pump pressure you get better atomization. so you can get more oil out of a smaller nozzle. Go to Hago’s website the make nozzles
That water heater was made by phase 3 which I believe I could be wrong got bought by triangle tube or was made by triangle tube I remember seeing the phase 3 ones in 2000 when I started this trade, 20 years with the same company.
Enjoy the oil burner videos especially with the boilers. 2 tanks and a 1.35 nozzle that's my kind of customer 😅😂🤣
Hello Steven. How are you? What is the knob you were adjusting at timeline 18:55? What does it do and how can i set it correctly?
You need one of those kneeling pads buddy. Take it easy
He has one
Sometimes you can see it it's on his dashboard
I think the space shuttle engine has less valves and connections 🚀
Give it de ole how ya doin mama
Is it that time of the year already Steve. Business is going to start going from AC’s to boilers. In AZ, we are still using our AC’s all day and night.
Keep doing these vids, Steve there awesome
Hi there Steve what's the best type boilers to buy and able to get parts for it as well
steve you need propress its the thing I ever invested in ed leak master plumbing in ct
Crusty one mr.Grinch!
How come those solder joints opened up? Expansion contraction?
Great video thank you
It's getting to that time of year where his jobs are going to become shit shows. Fixing air conditioning is not as complex as hot water heaters and oil burners. Get ready for crusty ones Steven, Mr. Grinch might be coming out early with the winter they are forecasting. I noticed that when you were changing the nozzles you didn't take a screwdriver and twirl it inside the nozzle compartment.
Matthew Kowal the retention head is part of the nozzle on this one (the finned looking part he took off before removing the nozzle). The ones he sticks the screwdriver in have the retention attached to the end of the air tube.
@@erikj.2066 What is the purpose of sticking the screwdriver into where the retention head is attached to the end of the air tube? Learning from your comment, I now know that the retention head is the part that he sprayed. For a model of that kind, it's been a while since I saw that much air purged out of the oil line. That beast is full of soot from the looks of that.
Matthew Kowal the screwdriver on the fixed head type checks if the head is broken, or missing.
I don’t think he purged all of the air out of the filter he changed, so that’s why it takes a few to eliminate the air.
At the end he used a draft meter, and found negative draft, meaning there shouldn’t be much soot or restrictions in the boiler sections.
@@erikj.2066 Either way, Steven is a unique guy dedicated to getting the job done. He leaves no stone unturned, and goes beyond the code so that your systems last longer than expected. Not to mention he can't stress enough to get your system serviced every year regularly.
She's a leaka mamma, she's a leaka!
good job , great video ^_^
I wonder what hacker put that unit in using ProPress and it looks to me everything is corroded and I do have to add in what a shitshow. Peace brother and Molly
Nice
Nice 👍 Cool 😎 Peace ✌️
This looking like another shit show job you are making it work good for you keep up the good work that you are doing and keep the videos coming
Bet it has glycol in the system
Rough
@@WTC7 roof
Woof.
"Flippin Shit Show" what does the owner have in those pipes sulfuric acid? She's a leaker all over the place
+1
Like
What a mess
Women sounds like she smacks down her liberal husband
Ruff and crusty
What Miss Molly would say
I had our oil furnace & AC service same company for 17 years. Everything was working fine until he touched it. "He asked me are you having problems with primary relay"? I said no. I think somehow he short it my primarily any charge me $185.00 plus 95.00 total $280.00 It was working fine before he came that's my argument. Thinking about finding another company.
17 years...one problem, yeah you better run to a new company.
Can you short out a primary relay during a service tune up? It was working fine before.
@@James_Bowie The service company guy. I can't reveal the name.
@@JoePJack1 The problem is you always get a different service tech.
H B he might have tested the primary relay and the safety didn’t trip after 15 seconds. That’s one reason that it would “be fine before he touched it” and then he saw it was bad.