The blower you refer to is shown in this photo.
Some folks use a VFD on their blower.
This may be a low rpm motor.
Here is what looks like an analogous commercial unit made by Mifco, and the combustion air blower is quite large.
A Mifco "B-301" is about the size of my first furnace, which is probably on the large side for hobby work.
I experimented for several years with different burner types and blower configurations.
Member "ArtB" is the individual who finally explained combustion engineering to me as relates to a foundry furnace.
Per ArtB, there is a fixed surface area inside of a furnace, say "X" square inches, and so there is some maximum gallons per hour of oil that can be forced into the furnace with an oil burner "Y" that can be completely combusted inside the furnace.
Once you get beyond Y gallons per hour, then the furnace can no longer fully combust all of the fuel that is being injected into the furnace, and any fuel added after "Y" does not burn until it exits the furnace via the opening in the lid.
When I started building a foundry, I assumed that with burners, bigger was better, and I also assumed that a higher fuel flow rate would burn hotter than a lower fuel flow rate.
As with many assumptions I made in the beginning, I was wrong about the fuel flow vs temperature.
I made a series of valves (a valve tree), so I could quickly test various fuel flow rates.
Each valve was calibrated with its own needle valve.
I could turn on 1, 2, 3, 4, 5, 6 etc. gallons per hour, and I experimented with flow rates up to 10 gallons per hour.
After much experimentation, I found that for a 13" diameter, 14" tall furnace interior, a diesel fuel flow rate of about 2.7 gallons per hour produced the hottest furnace interior, and produced the fastest iron melt.
I ended up calibrating my siphon nozzle (cold) to 2.7 gallons per hour, and then I adjusted my combustion air blower (which is a Toro variable speed leaf blower) to give about 4" of flame out the lid when operating (operating rich or reducing, to minimize oxidation of the iron).
This happens to be the air produced at the lowest speed of a Toro leaf blower.
Many large blowers have an intake damper, to allow adjustment of cfm into the furnace.
A large blower will outlast a smaller blower, due to the commercial motor.
I initially used the output of a shop vacuum, but shop vacs will wear out over time.
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