Forum Discussion
pianotuna
Jan 17, 2015Nomad III
Hi,
Then I'll try to enlighten you directly.
My understanding is that when the temperature is low enough the working material gels and temporarily clogs the tubing. The boiler continues to operate and reaches temperatures high enough to precipitate the anti corrosion material. When the ambient temperature rises the particulates can clump together in the tubes and may form a permanent clog.
Unfortunately, the anti corrosion material does not dissolve back into the solution.
I hope this helps.
Then I'll try to enlighten you directly.
My understanding is that when the temperature is low enough the working material gels and temporarily clogs the tubing. The boiler continues to operate and reaches temperatures high enough to precipitate the anti corrosion material. When the ambient temperature rises the particulates can clump together in the tubes and may form a permanent clog.
Unfortunately, the anti corrosion material does not dissolve back into the solution.
I hope this helps.
wing_zealot wrote:
I followed the link and read what it said. Apparently is must be poorly written because it was misunderstood and caused no enlightenment. But thanks for explaining the difference.
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