A Furnace works by heating the power plant with the fuel provided you idiot...
how else do you think it works??
one of the main purpose of refractories in the boiler furnace is to
I think because it works more like a heat exchanger taking heat from the exhaust gas, rather than a "standard" boiler with a furnace?An EGB needs a pump to circulate the water through the pipes in the exhaust stack, whereas a furnace-heated boiler can use convection to move the fluid through the system..?Might have something to do with lower temperatures in an EGB?
A waterwall in a boiler is any furnace wall that is comprised of refractory and tubes in a water-tube boiler. The tubes are evenly spaced and generally connect to headers which in turn are connected back to the main generating bank of the boiler. They serve a two fold purpose here in that they capture heat that would otherwise escape to the atmosphere and help heat the water in the boiler. And they also help keep the refractory cool (relatively speaking) This prevents spalling of the refractory.
Because it has air in it.
It removes the gases present in the steam,given by heaters.dearater is necessary otherwise the gases in steam will corrode the boiler and also affect the turbine.
one of the main purpose of refractories in the boiler furnace is to
Granville T. Woods invented the Steam Boiler Furnace
A furnace heats air; a boiler heats water. --The HVAC Veteran
Who was responsible for moderizing the railroad and inventing the steam boiler furnace
Boiler is another word for a furnace. Boiler service includes checking to make sure your heating system is installed correctly, working safely and efficiently.
Inventor Granville Woods received his first patent on January 3, 1884 for a steam boiler furnace.
Furnace, boiler, burner, cinerarium, cinerator, crematory, heater, heating system, oil burner, pyre
have baseboard heat boiler runs off furnace want to shut off furnace to save oil will it hurt anything
Nothing as a furnace is scorhed air a BOILER is either water or steam and "Relief Valves" are for liquid thus either you have a boiler or your furnace is being flooded from an outside source
A furnace does NOT have water... A boiler has water .. NICE trick question
heater, boiler, oven
The boiler itself consists of two principal parts: the furnace, which provides heat, usually by burning fuel, and the boiler proper, in which water is converted to steam by the heat piped in from the furnace.