Idea Heat scavanger / preheating blast air
#1
Well I thought about starting a new thread so we can swap ideas on the subject and not get off track in other threads. The heat scavaging sorta started as a bit of a joke at the local JR College sand casting class. I would say we could bake a pie on top of the crucible furnace. I did use the exhaust to heat up metal and straighten or bend into shape like a Blacksmith would. I still cringe when I think of the mini Model T leaf spring I had turn eyelets on each end and was letting it cool, Ernie Werner comes over a grabs it while saying how good it looked..... the sound of skin sizzling ... that still sticks with me. Quite a lot of heat is wasted!
Now I have a partially built cupola, and thoughts of preheating the blast. How I was going to do this was to feed the air into a exchanger at the top of the cupola then it would feed the tuyeres in the heart of the furnace, This was to allow for smaller tuyeres but more of them for more even heating.
   
not a good pic it's just sitting outside, probably will not be finished cause the amount of work need to feed and tap a cupola is a multiple person project. I do have almost 30 years of waste oil in drums, lots of old oil burners around here. A waste matbe the wat to make a workable batch of iron for all those things that need to be cast! Also a scrap aluminum ingot maker would be good too!
What I'm thinking is a double walled top hat that will go on top of the furnace, air feeds in one side out the outer using flexible exhaust tubing so we can still get the lid open easy, still need to feed the furnace. Might need to be "C" shaped??? Please feel free to think out loud!
oldgoaly, proud to be a member of MetalworkingFun Forum since Jun 2013.
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#2
Hello,
Blast furnaces use a system of on and off blast stoves, where the blast furnace gas evolved from the coke breaking down in incomplete oxygen is burned in a stove, when it gets too hot to keep burning they move to the next stove, then the blast air is forced throught the hot stove to preheat it prior to it going to the tuyeres, it can be very easyy done using large terracotta flower pots filled with bricks and buried in sand in 20 gallon drums, build two of these recovery stoves and channel the exhaust heat through the first one then swap so the blower pushes air through the first one and into the tuyeres while the exhaust heat goes to the second recovery stove a basic X valve can be made to switch blast direction and you are going to get pretty good heat recovery for the price of four big flower pots and some old bricks. sounds good to me and the idea has been used for over a hundred years so will definitely work to some level of efficiency, incidentally even if the recovery units are small it just means more frequent swapping between them, ideally you want a thermo couple in each to maximise the blast temperatures.
Regards
Rick
Whatever it is, do it today, Tomorrow may not be an option and regret outlasts fatigue.
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