Assembling the burner is fairly straightforward, and takes a few hours. Basically, these are the required steps:
• Replace the Beckett retention head with the new one
• Put the nozzle and the thermocouple in the block heater
• Remove the “J� tube. It will be used as the air supply tube for the nozzle block. Measure the length necessary to place the nozzle flush with the opening in the retention head, and cut the J-tube so that it is about 3/8� longer than the back of the nozzle block
• Use a 1/8� NPT die to cut threads on the J tube and thread it into the back of the nozzle block. The end of the J-tube I had used 45 degree flare; my local hardware store didn’t have any adapters to go from ¼� flare to NPT, so I brazed a flared tubing end to a female 1/8� NPT coupler to make my own adapter.
• Run ¼� copper line from the back of the nozzle block out the side of the burner, underneath the igniter. Where you run this line will depend on your furnace design; see my pics for how I ran mine. This line will be under a vacuum, and if your fittings leak the burner won’t run right. So it is important that all connections be leak free. It has been my experience with past projects that compression fittings will leak after they’ve been tightened and loosened once; you’re better off to buy the tools (they’re cheap) for doing flare fittings.
• Run the line for the thermocouple into the box under the primary safety.
• Move the flame detector somewhere that it can see the flame. I moved mine to the side of the blast tube and ran the wire with the thermocouple cable.
• When you close the igniter box, make sure it makes contact with the leads. Mine didn’t…so I welded a few inches of 3/16� steel rod to the back of the rods. You could just use some allthread though…and I’ve been told that heating shops carry longer rods.
• Remove the oil pump from the burner, and pull out the coupler from inside of the burner fan (this is the parts that drives the oil pump). The pump will not be used, but must be reinstalled to allow the air adjustment to work.
• Wire up the temperature controller; mine had a wiring diagram on a sticker on the side. It’s pretty straightforward; 110v power goes to 2 terminals (this power should come from the power to the primary safety; it is switched on by the thermostat, described in following steps), the thermocouple goes to 2 terminals, and the output contacts switch power to the relay for the cartridge heater. I left the relay in the box under the primary safety (looks cleaner than mounting it elsewhere in the furnace). The alarm contacts go to the “T� terminals on the primary safety. I set my temp controller to 180 degrees, and set the alarm to -15 (so the alarm contacts close at 165 degrees). When the alarm contacts close, this completes the circuit across the TT terminals and starts the burner.
• Adjust the pressure regulator to roughly 15 PSI and plumb it into the burner
• Plumb the air solenoid in line with the regulator.
• Wire the air solenoid to the power output from the primary safety. This means that whenever the safety turns on the burner motor and igniter, it also opens up the air solenoid (and, in turn, starts oil flow)
I tested my burner on the bench with cold oil; found that its performance on the bench isn’t the same as its performance when installed inside of the combustion chamber. I think that the heat inside the chamber helps burn the fuel. My flame was a little inconsistent and tended to go out unless I heated the fuel line with a propane torch. At any rate, it is good to test it on the bench to make sure all of the systems work right. This is a good time to adjust the igniter contacts too. I found that with roughly 30 minutes of testing EVERYTHING in the vicinity of the burner had a thin coating of oil on it. If I do this again, I won’t run my burner inside a building, or even near a building, car, or anything else that I don’t want an oily film on.
I installed my burner back in my furnace, and cut a couple of holes in the side of the furnace for the temp controllers. The power to the primary safety and both temperature controllers comes from a relay inside of the furnace that is switched by a wall thermostat.