The tricky bit was to keep the fuel /air ratio correct when the system changes from low to high I needed a delay on the fan to give the pellets time to start burning and again to give them time to burn down when it switches down to low fire to avoid smoking, to simplify this and avoid too many timers I fitted a PLC controller so the timers and delays could all be programmed the only down side of this system is on low fire with the 2.5 minute cycle to avoid blowing the safety valve it smokes slightly when the pellets go in because the fire is almost out.
The blower is a plastic marine type bilge fan with an adjustable voltage regulator the wiper motor was from a small car and both draw about 4 amps total the new system draws about 2.5 amps because the motors are more efficient .
I usually light the fire when I leave home and leave it switched to low fire to warm up on the way to the ramp and if I am in a hurry to get steam up I stop 15 minutes from the ramp and switch to high fire so I have steam when I arrive .
I have a 90 watt flexible solar panel on my canopy and the battery is always fully charged.
I am currently working on Mk 3 control system which should be the rolls royce system based on an Arduino Uno programmable controller with a stepper motor on the pellets and a quad copter motor fitted to the blower to give a step-less continuous flow of pellets and variable fan speed with adjustable ramp rate up and down , I have it running on the floor and hopefully in the boat tomorrow .
I suggest if you are interested in pellet firing make a prototype from a couple of tins like the one in my video and hand feed the pellets and play around and see what happens the blower I used was a small .3 amp brushless blower like a large computer cooling fan which was plenty for the prototype but my boiler has too many leaks so I needed a bigger one for the boat.
You could get away with the simple timer system without a pressure switch and simply switch it to low when the pressure builds up .

