
3. GAS AND ELECTRICAL CONNECTIONS
When connecting a gas supply it is desirable to install a manual shut-off valve together with a suitable pipe
union at or near the burner. The burner assembly should not be used to support the incoming gas supply,
suitable brackets or hangers should be used for this purpose. Care should be taken to ensure that the
incoming gas piping is sized correctly to prevent excessive drops, also that gas connections are pressure
tight and gas line purged and pressure tested in accordance with local gas authority requirements or
legislation.
Wiring of the burner should be in accordance with the appropriate wiring standards. A suitable mains
isolator should be placed in a convenient location, and the final electrical connections to the burner should
be in flexible conduits. It is vital that the live and neutral wires are connected to their appropriate terminal
as reversal could present a hazard, also the earth bonding must be checked to ensure a good earth
connection (poor earth connections are often the cause of faulty burner operation when using the flame
probe detection).
Note: Gas piping must not be used for earthing.
The burners are all of the ‘expanding flame’ type pilot system and can use ‘intermittent’, interrupted’, or
‘semi-automatic’ flame failure control boxes.
4. ELECTRICAL SEQUENCE – FULLY AUTOMATIC SYSTEM
1. Switch panel isolator ON.
2. “Programme” Time Switch as required.
3. Reset “Excess Temp” on control panel.
4. Turn “OFF/AUTO” switch to “AUTO” for automatic start-up when time switch is in the ON state.
5. Air pressure switch must prove “no air”.
6. Start burners. Action of time switch switches burners on.
7. Burner controller (LFL1.335) starts light-up sequence.
8. Air control valve drives OPEN.
9. Air control valve must prove OPEN throughout pre-purge period.
10. Air control valve drives CLOSED.
11. Air control valve must prove CLOSED.
12. Ignition transformers are energised.
13. Gas pilot valves are energised.
14. Ignition transformers are de-energised.
15. Flame must be proved on burner.
16. Main gas valves are energised.
17. “Release to modulation” relay energised.
18. Air control valve comes under control of temperature controller.
19. Burners shut down via time switch, or excess temp., or OFF/AUTO switch.
20. Air control valve drives CLOSED.
5. LOW FIRE (PILOT START GAS AND AIR SETTINGS) (minimum input rate)
Set air butterfly valve to give approximately 15mm (0.6 ins) wg air pressure at inlet to burner (above
combustion chamber pressure/suction).
Slightly ‘crack’ open gas flow control valve.
Initiate start sequence, if burner fails to ignite, slightly increase gas flow at butterfly valve and reset
sequence controller and initiate a new start sequence, repeating as many times as necessary to give a
smooth start (the burner should not light with an ignition shock or noise) – if this is the case the gas flow is
generally too high for a safe start-up.
N.B: It is recommended that the start gas rate should never exceed 10% of burner rating.
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