search
cart
facebook instagram twitter linkedin youtube
  • Sign In
  • Create Account
  • Sign Out
  • My Account
  • NEWS
  • PRODUCTS
    • FEATURED PRODUCTS
  • CONTRACTORS
    • BATH & KITCHEN PRO
    • BUSINESS MANAGEMENT
    • HIGH EFFICIENCY HOMES
    • TECHNOLOGY
    • WATER TREATMENT
    • PMC COLUMNS
      • Dave Yates: Contractor’s Corner
      • John Siegenthaler: Hydronics Workshop
      • Kenny Chapman: The Blue Collar Coach
      • Matt Michel: Service Plumbing Pros
      • Scott Secor: Heating Perceptions
  • ENGINEERS
    • CONTINUING EDUCATION
    • DECARBONIZATION | ELECTRIFICATION
    • FIRE PROTECTION
    • GEOTHERMAL | SOLAR THERMAL
    • PIPING | PLUMBING | PVF
    • PME COLUMNS
      • Christoph Lohr: Strategic Plumbing Insights
      • David Dexter: Plumbing Talking Points
      • James Dipping: Engineer Viewpoints
      • John Seigenthaler: Renewable Heating Design
      • Lowell Manalo: Plumbing Essentials
      • Misty Guard: Guard on Compliance
  • RADIANT & HYDRONICS
    • RADIANT COMFORT REPORT
    • THE GLITCH & THE FIX
  • INSIGHTS
    • CODES
    • GREEN PLUMBING & MECHANICAL
    • PROJECT PROFILES
    • COLUMNS
      • Codes Corner
      • Natalie Forster: Editorial Opinion
      • Guest Editorial
  • MEDIA
    • EBOOKS
    • PODCASTS
    • VIDEOS
    • WEBINARS
  • RESOURCES
    • INDUSTRY CALENDAR
    • DIRECTORIES
    • PM BOOKSTORE
    • CE CENTER
    • MARKET RESEARCH
    • CLASSIFIEDS
  • EMAGAZINE
    • EMAGAZINE
    • ARCHIVE ISSUES
    • CONTACT
    • ADVERTISE
    • PME EMAGAZINE ARCHIVES
  • SIGN UP!
Green Plumbing and MechanicalPlumbing & Mechanical Engineer Piping | Plumbing | PVF

The misunderstood barometric damper

Controlling boiler draft saves heat and reduces operating costs.

Check valve outlet ventilation system close up
Image source: tanyss / iStock / Getty Images Plus

Image source: tanyss / iStock / Getty Images Plus

February 13, 2013
One of the most misunderstood components inside a boiler room is the barometric damper, which is used to control the draft inside a boiler.

It is installed on boilers that use a Category I vent. To understand how the barometric damper operates, we need to understand what draft is. We all know when air is heated, it will rise. When hot air from the boiler rises up the stack, it must be replaced by cooler air surrounding the boiler. This cooler air will push the warmer air up the stack, causing flow. This flow of air from the boiler up the stack to the outside is referred to as draft. It also is called “chimney effect.”

The speed or velocity of the flue gas draft is affected by many conditions such as temperature difference between inside and outside the building, wind fluctuations, chimney height, burner firing rate and barometric conditions. It constantly changes.

" High draft will pull the flue gases too quickly through a boiler, not allowing the heat to be transferred into the boiler. "

 

On cold days, the draft may be very high. In some instances, excessive draft could actually pull the flame off the burner. In lesser conditions, it could simply pull the heat more quickly than desired through the boiler. This wastes money because the heat does not have time to transfer to the boiler. Instead, it is wasted up the stack. During cold startups, the cold stack may allow spillage of the flue gases into the boiler room until the stack warms enough to sustain draft.

Chimney effect is sometimes experienced in tall buildings. Here in my hometown, a large commercial building used to have some real issues from the excessive chimney effect in the building. The main entrance to the building used to have a set of double doors with a small vestibule that was directly in front of the main escalators for the building. During the rush hour on a cold morning the negative conditions inside the building would be very high. When both sets of doors were opened simultaneously, the wind would whip into the building at high velocities.

These powerful wind gusts would blow up womens’ skirts and dresses, embarrassing and then angering the wearer. The building owners were forced to replace the double doors with large revolving doors in an effort to combat the building’s chimney effect.

On another building, the engineer factored the building draft into his HVAC design and made a system using the chimney effect to provide free ventilation to the building without fans.

Buffer solution

When a tall chimney is attached to a boiler, the draft readings will vary greatly. The boiler requires a stable environment and the chimney is like the “wild child.” Most older boilers were designed to have a draft at the outlet of the boiler to be about -0.05 in. w.c. The draft conditions inside the chimney could cause swings of 10, 20 or even 100 times that amount. How do you provide a buffer to handle these erratic swings?

A barometric damper is a great solution. High draft will pull the flue gases too quickly through a boiler, not allowing the heat to be transferred into the boiler. The barometric damper is installed in the flue between the boiler and the chimney. It is set for the desired draft conditions using weights and adjustment screws. If the draft inside the chimney is greater than the setpoint, the damper will open and allow air from the boiler room inside the chimney, rather than stealing heat from the boiler.

Draft controls are typically used when the stack or chimney height is greater than 30 ft. Excessive draft inside a boiler can cause other strange behaviors. In addition to increased operating costs, the high draft can cause flame impingement on the boiler. This could develop higher than desired levels of carbon monoxide.

Flame impingement also could cause embrittlement of the boiler metal, lowering the life of the boiler. Embrittlement is the loss of ductility of the metal. It is similar to what happens when you keep bending a paper clip. It will eventually break. Flame impingement means the burner flame is touching the metal surfaces of the boiler that were not designed to have flame directly on them.

We had a vertical fire-tube steam boiler where the flame was drawn into the rear tubes of the boiler. It caused violent surges and waves inside the boiler. This caused wet steam and tripping of the low-water cutoff. Excessive draft also can cause the burner to overfire. If the gas pressure regulator is set for a certain pressure, the high draft can actually pull more gas through the regulator, overfiring the boiler.

Barometric dampers are installed only on boilers with negative venting. Boilers with pressurized vents would spill flue gases out of the barometric dampers into the room.

When choosing a barometric damper, you will find two types: single- and double-acting. A single-acting damper has a stop that only allows the damper to swing one way. A double-acting damper  allows the damper to swing two ways. The single-acting damper will close if pressure exists inside the stack. The double-acting damper actually will allow spillage of the flue gases into the boiler room in the event of blocked flues or downdrafts.

I know that sounds crazy. It is why I like seeing spill switches on the barometric damper. If spillage from the barometric damper gets into the boiler room, this switch will sense it and shut off the burner. In some locations, installation of spill switches is part of the boiler code.

Each fuel or combination of fuels requires a specific type of barometric damper. Single-acting is traditionally used for oil-fired burners and double-acting is used for gas burners. The stops found in double-acting dampers should be removed if firing only with gas.

KEYWORDS: boilers

Share This Story

Looking for a reprint of this article?
From high-res PDFs to custom plaques, order your copy today!

Recommended Content

JOIN TODAY
to unlock your recommendations.

Already have an account? Sign In

  • 2025 Next Gen ALL-STARS hero 1440

    2025 Next Gen All Stars: Top 20 Under 40 Plumbing Professionals

    This year’s group of NextGen All-Stars is full of young...
    Plumbing & Mechanical Engineer
    By: Kristen R. Bayles
  • Worker using the Milwaukee Tool SWITCH PACK drain cleaner

    Pipeline profits: Drain cleaning, pipe inspection create opportunities

    Drain cleaning and inspection services offer lucrative...
    Green Plumbing and Mechanical
    By: Nicole Krawcke
  • Uponor employee, Arturo Moreno

    The reinvestment in American manufacturing and training

    Plumbing & Mechanical Chief Editor Nicole Krawcke and...
    Plumbing News
    By: Nicole Krawcke and Natalie Forster
Manage My Account
  • Newsletters
  • Online Registration
  • Subscription Customer Service
  • eMagazine
  • Manage My Preferences

More Videos

Popular Stories

Hot water pipes

Campus shutdown at Oakland University exposes hidden risks of aging hot-water infrastructure

Floor heating manifold cabinet with flowmeter and PEX pipe.

Elegance extended: How to use the homerun system of connecting heat emitters

Industrial pressure gauge on a tank.

From cutting edge to classic: How to modernize outdated pneumatic control systems

Poll

Will business be up or down in 2025?

Do you anticipate business in 2025 to be up or down in comparison to 2024?
View Results Poll Archive

Products

The Water Came To A Stop

The Water Came To A Stop

See More Products
eBook | 2025 Radiant & Hydronics All Stars

Related Articles

  • Understanding barometric dampers

    See More
  • The Most Misunderstood Fixture

    See More
  • thermostat

    Dan Holohan: Do you miss the T87

    See More

Related Products

See More Products
  • The ACCA Job Safety (1).jpg

    The ACCA On-The-Job Safety Handbook (Pack of 5)

  • what hydronics taught holohan.jpg

    What Hydronics Taught Holohan: A Memoir of Life in the Heating Industry

See More Products

Events

View AllSubmit An Event
  • September 11, 2025

    Optimized Plumbing Design for the 21st Century: Smarter Systems for Health, Affordability, and Sustainability

    On Demand The session highlights how modernized plumbing design can accelerate hot water delivery, reduce stagnation, and mitigate health risks, while supporting affordability, energy efficiency, and sustainability.  Earn: 0.1 IAPMO CEU; 0.1 ASPE CEU; 0.1 ICC CEU; 1 PDH; 1 AIA LU/HSW
View AllSubmit An Event
×

Keep your content unclogged with our newsletters!

Stay in the know on the latest plumbing & piping industry trends.

JOIN TODAY!
  • RESOURCES
    • Advertise
    • Contact Us
    • Directories
    • Store
    • Want More
    • Supply House Times
  • SIGN UP TODAY
    • Create Account
    • eMagazine
    • Newsletter
    • Customer Service
    • Manage Preferences
  • SERVICES
    • Marketing Services
    • Reprints
    • Market Research
    • List Rental
    • Survey/Respondent Access
  • STAY CONNECTED
    • LinkedIn
    • Facebook
    • Instagram
    • YouTube
    • X (Twitter)
  • PRIVACY
    • PRIVACY POLICY
    • TERMS & CONDITIONS
    • DO NOT SELL MY PERSONAL INFORMATION
    • PRIVACY REQUEST
    • ACCESSIBILITY

Copyright ©2025. All Rights Reserved BNP Media.

Design, CMS, Hosting & Web Development :: ePublishing