I read with envy all these posts from you guys that have gasification boilers. They sure seem to be efficient and use less wood than my system. The question I have before looking vary hard at replacement of my 5 year old unit is the burn time of most gasifiers (EKO, Tarm, Econoburn, etc. ) I've read through many posts and the most common answer is 4-6 hours of active burn time.
Here is my situation: I have a ThermoControl 2500 boiler in my garage. It's plumbed into 1000 gallons of pressurized storage and my old oil boiler serves as the backup (automatically - when it works). The Thermocontrol is a beast not unlike your typical OWB, but it does have secondary air tubes that place air in the back of the chamber for passive secondary air. No major complaints with the boiler at five years old. However, it is somewhat inefficient (tested at 76%) compared to gassers, uses about 12 full cords of dry hardwood per year to heat 4000sf, my garage, and hot water, and it does not completely combust the wood, leaving lots of black charcoal on the firebrick. (I think this is largely due to a lack of any grates to allow the ash to filter out. If I stir things up enough, the charcoal does get consumed). Very clean burning with not much smoke unless starting the fire. All the parts are simple and commercially available (no proprietary, expensive stuff).
The thing I love about this boiler is that I can fill it in the morning and walk away for at least 12 hours. I get home and there is always a bed of coals enough to re-ignite the new charge of wood without messing around. I basically fill the thing 2x per day and that's it. The fire gets lit in October, and stays lit until April. I don't even have kindling wood.
Is this sort of operation feasible with a gasser? I don't relish the idea of making a fire, lighting it, and waiting 10 minutes to flip the handle over to gasification mode once it's hot enough. Would there be a bed of coals hot enough to re-ignite new wood after 12 hours even if I got a large (300K btu) econoburn or something like that?
Thanks to you all for this site. It is a huge help
Drew
Here is my situation: I have a ThermoControl 2500 boiler in my garage. It's plumbed into 1000 gallons of pressurized storage and my old oil boiler serves as the backup (automatically - when it works). The Thermocontrol is a beast not unlike your typical OWB, but it does have secondary air tubes that place air in the back of the chamber for passive secondary air. No major complaints with the boiler at five years old. However, it is somewhat inefficient (tested at 76%) compared to gassers, uses about 12 full cords of dry hardwood per year to heat 4000sf, my garage, and hot water, and it does not completely combust the wood, leaving lots of black charcoal on the firebrick. (I think this is largely due to a lack of any grates to allow the ash to filter out. If I stir things up enough, the charcoal does get consumed). Very clean burning with not much smoke unless starting the fire. All the parts are simple and commercially available (no proprietary, expensive stuff).
The thing I love about this boiler is that I can fill it in the morning and walk away for at least 12 hours. I get home and there is always a bed of coals enough to re-ignite the new charge of wood without messing around. I basically fill the thing 2x per day and that's it. The fire gets lit in October, and stays lit until April. I don't even have kindling wood.
Is this sort of operation feasible with a gasser? I don't relish the idea of making a fire, lighting it, and waiting 10 minutes to flip the handle over to gasification mode once it's hot enough. Would there be a bed of coals hot enough to re-ignite new wood after 12 hours even if I got a large (300K btu) econoburn or something like that?
Thanks to you all for this site. It is a huge help

Drew