Low Water Cutoffs: Cleaning Isn’t Testing (Part 2)
Most boiler rooms aren’t failing because they lack equipment. They’re failing because they assume the equipment will save them.
Low-water cutoffs are a perfect example. They’re simple, reliable devices. Right up until sludge, scale, or “we don’t shut it down” culture turns them into decorations.
So, here’s the operator-to-operator view of testing.
Low Water Cutoffs: What They Are and Why Most Boilers Have Two (Part 1)
If you run boilers long enough, you learn one lesson fast: low water is not a “maintenance issue.” It’s a failure mode.
Water isn’t just what you’re turning into steam. It’s also what keeps metal from overheating. When level drops, the heating surfaces lose that protection, temperatures spike, and damage comes quick. If somebody then “saves the day” by dumping water into an overheated boiler, you can create violent flash steam conditions. None of this is theoretical.
So let’s slow this down and keep it operator-to-operator.