Igniting wood-pellets with a good conscience – for the sake of the environment!
Ceramic hot surface igniters for pellet boilers only need approx. 1/10 of the energy of that needed by hot air fans and ignition blowers.
Their ignition capacity lies between 120 and 200 watt. Depending on the positioning of the ignition element in the boiler, the ignition time of approx. 60 seconds is extremely short. This also means minimal emissions!
• Hot surface igniters (ignition of gas, oil, biomass, pellets)
• Hot air generation
• Tool heating
• Melting/welding/soldering/hot gas soldering
• Heaters for chemical analysis and laboratory equipment (e.g. mini-furnaces, reactors)
• Customer-specific heating solutions
• Extremely fast and hot (permanently at 1100°C, for the short term up to 1300°C)
• Extremely energy-efficient
• Resistant to thermal stress (rapid switching is easily tolerated)
• Can be regulated easily and seamlessly (Pt characteristic)
• Very corrosion-resistant
• Practically non-ageing
• Ready assembled, easy-to-install systems
• Space-saving, noiseless and impervious to overheating (in case the blower fails)
• Extremely long-lasting and resilient
• Minimal energy consumption
• Completely electrically insulated
• No sensitive welding points
Product Name | Pellet igniters – ceramic hot surface igniters for pellet burners |
Size | length l = 94 mm and diameter d = 18 mm, |
Voltage | 230V, |
Power | 165W |
Flange | Ceramic flange |
Cable | 300-800mm |
Lead | In a ф 0. 5mm of Nickel wire(The length depends on the customer) |
Application | High-Temperature Igniter for Biomass-Burners |
Our hot surface igniters are perfectly suited for this purpose. The special geometry of the cylindrical ceramic heaters,
in combination with an extremely high surface temperature of 1000 °C, heats up the supply air in the shortest possible
time to an extremely high temperature. After a maximum of 90 seconds, the fuel is ignited with a fraction of the energy
that is required for a hot air or ignition blower. This works, of course, not only with pellets, but also with wood chips,
firewood, coal bricks or other solid fuels made of biomass.