Hi Martin, Glad to be able to talk to an expert (which I most certainly am not!).
You mention "Marty Burners" - Yes, they do function well, and produce very compact combustion. "
there a reasonable number of locos running with "Marty" burners in an array in place of the grate in otherwise coal fired boiler designs. Presumably, the boilers happen to have enough tube area and forced draught to cope?"
I'm sure you could work these into your calculations an an "interesting" exercise? - The LACK of radiant heating in the firebox amazes me - must burn more fuel and pass hotter gas through the tubes to get the required performance, perhaps? I am sure they will be using a lot of forced draught to do this.
http://ibls.org/mediawiki/index.php?title=File:Marty_Burners_original_drawing.jpg Note the gaps between rows of gas piping in the bottom of the firebox to get air in, which is drawn into the burners below the layer of combustion in the firebox.
Marty Burners - IBLS
You can easily buy similar burners sold as Chinese Wok burners, - to build into your own manifold. (Shown here in a Wok Burner manifold).
This is a completely different approach to that of Joan Llutch - who identified a type of "knitted wire" burner - and managed to obtain a couple of samples for testing - one of which is used in his Pacific loco - very successfully. I have tried making one (I can't knit - which means my wire matrix is too variable!) and made 8kW for 5 mins before ir flashed-back. Not good compared to the factory unit of over 27kW - from a 4in cylinder, 3 in tall. The radiant power is most of the heat broadcast from the burner. Therefore the gas temperature is lower? So a lower volume to pass through the flue tubes?
See Bekeart brochure.
I have a friend at the local Model Eng club (The Chairman) who has a Steam wagon, and has converted the boiler to gas firing using a Nystrom design of flare burner: see attached. 3 of those (powered around 25kw) power his wagon as capably as a coal fire, but he needs full blower to force the flue gases through all the time he is running at full gas. - so he uses more steam for the blower, and more water as a result. - Again, I reckon the flue gases must be hotter than from a coal fire, to get the heat into the boiler via gas heating flue tubes, with the low radiant heat from the flames giving less radiant heat to the firebox.
On a static boiler, my father used 3 of these Bray burners with a fan flame (converted from a domestic gas boiler to use Butane at pressure: Dia 0.25mm jet):
- BUT they only rated at maybe 500w each. A ceramic burner (possibly ~1.8kW, using Dia 0.3mm jet) was
much more effective at generating heat in a 3in horizontal boiler with 4 x 1/2"dia flue tubes.
BUT Ceramic burners cannot produce the power (temperature) required to get the power density for a firebox on a loco. Limited to about 1000deg.C max, you simply cannot get lots of flue gas heat added to the radiant heat they produce. And as a coal fire is more like 100~1200deg.C, and much deeper, the radiant power from that is much more than from the flat surface of the ceramic burner. (T-fourth effect).
It is an interesting balance!
K2