Burners quiz Flashcards

1
Q

What does the term “rapid carryover of flames” refer to?

A

when gas burner flame must pass smoothly over burner surface from one burner to the next

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2
Q

What does the term “wide turndown ratio” refer to?

A

range of inputs for proper combustion

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3
Q

Why would immediate ignition not occur and what could be the result?

A

clogged burner ports

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4
Q

What does the terminal “flow velocity” refer to ?

A

Rate at which the gas-air mixture leaves the burner

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5
Q

What does the terminal “flame speed” refer to and what are two ways that we can measure flame speed?

A

speed at which a flame moves through a fuel-air mix

  1. Bunsen burner method
  2. test tube method
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6
Q

In combustion, three things (the three T’s) are needed in order for proper combustion to occur. They are and what does each refer to?

A
  1. time - in order for comb
  2. temperature - enough flame for comb
  3. turbulence - mixes
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7
Q

How does the primary air supply affect the characteristics of the flame?

A

too much or too little will affect colour and shape

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8
Q

What is port loading?

A

amount of gas-air mixture passing through a port

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9
Q

What is “flashback” and what conditions could cause flashback? how could we correct flashback?

A

inverted cone int the burner caused by reduction in gas flow which must be increased

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10
Q

What is “flame liftoff” and what conditions cause flame liftoff? How could we correct flame liftoff?

A
  1. when gases don’t burn and flames are high
  2. over firing the burner
  3. correct the burner input
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11
Q

What is “waving flame”?

A

when flame is pushed off burner by excessive air movement

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12
Q

What is a “floating flame”?

A
  1. lazy flame with undefined cones reaching for air (incomplete combustion)
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13
Q

What is “flame rollout” ?

A

when flames roll out of combustion chamber

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14
Q

What is the difference between an aerated pilot and a non-aerated pilot?

A

aerated injects primary air before ignition - generally more stable and burns hotter

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15
Q

type of aerated pilot that draws primary air through a duct or tube - incinerates any dust or lint?

A

incinerating pilot

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16
Q

What are the three main functions of a pilot burner? Of those, which is the main function?

A
  1. LIGHT BURNER (main function)
  2. heat thermocouple
  3. provide mount for pilot
17
Q

How much primary air is used in a sandpan burner? how much secondary?

A

no primary, only secondary

18
Q

How much primary air is used on an infrared radiant burner? how much secondary?

A

all primary, no secondary

19
Q

What is the full name of this burner?

A

Upshot multiport atmospheric