Friday, 8 August 2014

How to Maintain an Oil Furnace

By Westin Hammel


Oil-fired burners are made use of in lots of parts of the nation as the basic heat source for warm air and warm water heating systems. The majority of the house oil systems in use today are called pressure burners. In this kind of system, oil is sprayed into a combustion chamber at high pressure, propelled by a blower and fired up by an electric spark.

The oil continues to burn as the mist is sprayed. While there aren't lots of fast repairs you can undertake yourself on these kinds of furnaces, excellent routine maintenance can help eliminate lots of troubles. Here are a few oil furnace maintenance pointers:.

During the heating season, examine the smoke from the chimney. If the smoke is black, the furnace is not burning the oil completely and fuel is being wasted. Call an expert service person for adjustments.

Clean the blower at the start of the heating period and again about midway through the season.

Clean soot from the stack control about midway through the heating season. If the blower motor has grease or oil fittings, lubricate the fittings midway through the heating season with cup grease or 10-weight non-detergent motor oil (not all-purpose oil), offered at hardware stores.Clean the thermostat prior to each heating period.

An oil furnace is a complicated assembly. The maintenance and repair work for this sort of furnace is limited to simple parts: the filters, the blower, the motor belts, the switches and the thermostat. Electrodes, an oil nozzle, air tubes, a transformer, a pump, and other components require special devices and testing devices and are best delegated a professional for service.

To end up being familiar with your oil furnace, eliminate the access panel covering the burner blower by getting rid of the keeping screws around the rim of the housing. You can access the air blower and filter through a metal panel on one side of the furnace. The panel is held by either hooks or retaining bolts; slip the panel up and off the hooks or get rid of the bolts and lift the panel off. Most furnaces have switches and reset buttons located on the motor or in a switch box outside the furnace housing. These are normally related to labels or stampings, such as DISCONNECT SWITCH, RESET, and so on. The stack control sensing unit, a security gadget that keeps an eye on burner operation, is positioned in the stack and held with a series of maintaining bolts.




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