“This proprietary system is a revolutionary control algorithm and methodology designed for fuel savings in gas-fired tunnel kilns, and we are convinced that this installation will perform even better than the kiln we have already supplied.”
The new kiln has an operating temperature of 2190°F (1200°C) and has been designed to work 24/7 year-round.
It has 28 kiln cars in total – 22 inside the kiln and 6 on the return tack and in waiting positions –. The cores will be fired in saggars, with typically 20kg (45lb) per saggar and a total load per kiln car of 980kg (2160lb).
Uniform heating of the ware throughout the firing cycle is guaranteed, with the burners arranged to fire horizontally into the combustion space below the ware in the preheat area, and below and above the ware in the main heating zones. The burners are installed in a staggered configuration to provide turbulence within the tunnel and improved temperature uniformity throughout the product.
Energy Efficiency & ecombustion
The most efficient use of energy inputs is obviously crucial to any such installation. Typical energy recovery systems comprise the use of preheated combustion and the use of a hot air recuperation system. ecombustion offers even more efficient firing techniques and has a very real impact on operational costs.
Tunnel kilns are by their nature efficient considering their walls are heated once, avoiding an energyconsuming warm-up and cool-down process with each cycle.
However, tunnel kilns also offer greater potential for internal heat recuperation, by reusing the air used to cool down the ware as high-temperature preheated combustion air within the kiln.
Tunnel kilns also have the benefit of transferring heat to the product by controlling the flow of hot combustion products from the hot zone down to the exhaust zone at the kiln entrance. This process, referred to as ‘internal recuperation’, relies on the flow control element which is part of the ecombustion concept.