Bark, such as is used by tanners, has an excellent effect on boiler incrustations. It may be used as follows: Throw into the tank or reservoir from which the boilers are fed a quantity of bark in the piece, in sufficient quantity to turn the water to a light brown color. Repeat this operation every month at least, using only half the quantity after the first month. Add a very small quantity of the muriate of ammonia, about one pound for every 2,000 gallons of water used. This will have the effect of softening as well as disintegrating the carbonate of lime and other impurities deposited by the action of evaporation.
Note.—Care must be exercised in keeping the bark, as it becomes broken up, from the pump valves and blow-off valves. This may be accomplished by throwing it into the reservoir confined in a sack.
Among the best samples of boiler compounds ever sent to the laboratory for analysis was found to be composed of:
| Pounds | |
|---|---|
| Sal soda | 40 |
| Catechu | 5 |
| Sal ammoniac | 5 |
This solution was formerly sold at a good round figure, but since its nature became more generally known, it is not found in market, but is largely used, consumers putting it up in lots sufficient to last a year or so at a time.
The above is strongly recommended by those who have used it, one pound of the mixture being added to each barrel of water used but after the scale is once thoroughly removed from the boiler, the use of sal soda alone is all that is necessary. By the use of ten pounds per week a boiler 26 feet long and 40 inches in diameter in one of the iron mills of New Albany, Ind., has been kept clean of scale equal to a new boiler.
There are other evils sometimes inherent in hard waters over and above the mere production of a crust. Some waters contain a great deal of soluble magnesia salts, together with common salt. When this is the case there is a great chance of corrosion, for the former is acted on by steam at high pressure in such a way that muriatic acid fumes are produced, which seriously corrodes the boiler, and, what is far worse, passes with the steam into the engine, and produces corrosion in the cylinders and other delicate fittings into contact with which the steam passes. All this can, however, be obviated by the removal of the magnesia from the water.
There has not been, and never can be, made a mechanical device which will precipitate all the ingredients contained in a water taken from a natural source of supply, and if it were possible to do so it would be the most ruinous thing one could do for the boilers, as water is the greatest solvent known to chemistry, and its nature is to hold in solution and be impregnated with the different elements it comes in contact with, to a certain per cent., and if its lime, magnesia, and the mineral salts are taken away, and the pure water is pumped into the boilers, it will take up the iron, causing pitting and grooving of the boilers. It is better to let nature take its course, to a certain extent, and neutralize what little mineral deposit forms in the boilers with as small an amount of vegetable matter as possible.
It is well to note that different waters require different treatment; what will be of benefit in one instance will be of no value whatever in a different water, many of the “compounds” sold to prevent and remove scale will certainly destroy a boiler if they are used persistently, because they are composed of the exact opposite chemicals which should be used; as an example it is stated that at one establishment one thousand dollars were expended annually for a mixture which it is said resulted in the reduction of the life and usefulness of the boilers of 50 per cent.