Fulton Vertical Electric (FT-N) Thermal Fluid (hot oil) Heater User Manual

Page 104

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Fulton Thermal Corp.*Electric Thermal Fluid Heaters Manual* Version 2010-0423

Page 104

A system of interconnecting pipework in the thermal buffer tank section prevents the movement of any oil,

that has not cooled sufficiently, into the expansion section. This avoids contact of very high thermal fluid

temperature with oxygen contained in the atmosphere.

Sizing the Tank for the System:

Expansion tank capacity is the total volume of the tank. It is necessary to have some air space available

at the tope of the tank to avoid spillage or overflow.

At initial fill (for system volume calculations) the deaerator and cold seal sections must be filled

completely, and the expansion section must be filled to a level of 4” to “make” the low level switch.

The volume between the initial fill level and the safe “full” level is the amount available for expansion. That

volume is used to decide which tank is suitable for the system expansion.

Model

Capacity

(Gallons)

Initial Fill

(Gallons)

Available for

Expansion

(Gallons)

Max System

Volume

FT-100-L 35

9

25

100

FT-200-L 52

25

46

184

FT-1000-L

264 80 232 1000

FT-1500-L

397 90 380 1400

FT-2000-L 528

145

444

1700

FT-3000-L 793

215

717

2600

FT-5000-L 1310

300

1168

4600

Example: A System contains 175 gallons, including the heater, but not the tank. You select the FT-200-L,

so you add 25 gallons to 175. You must look up the expansion rate for the thermal fluid. (Assume it’s

25%). 200 gal. x 1.25=250 gal. 250-200=50 gal. expansion. The FT-200-L has only 46 gal. available for

expansion, so the correct selection is FT-500-L.

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