...
I would find the root cause, not patch
1000's of boilers operate without this issue
This is really it right here. Study it for understanding.
It's called the art of steam heating, really science raised to an art level.
As a young new contractor bidding work, got the wiring bid for two new boilers for a school seven or eight towns away. Prime mechanical contractor was also a new contractor guy I met, friend now.
Point is we were new and I though the same thing, the other boilers work there must be a way. Design engineer was a very old guy who was getting sued for breaking the boilers on his last job, a high school. Found this out half way through.
I studied it and figured it out, including addressing the thermal shock.
Time came to fire it first time and this was very out of character for my friend, never before or since. I had no idea what he was thinking. As soon as it lit he hustled me out of the boiler room to a bar where he bought me a burger and fries, making jokes, what is that flying overhead, that looks like part of those boilers. Look there it is again, looks like a boiler flying overhead.
Seen a lot of steam and water volcanoes on first fire since then .
Half way through the maintenance man walks me down to the new wing to show me the new boiler there. He opens the door to this small room and the boiler inside looked like it was coated with 1" snow. I felt sick until he closed the door. Now at this time I can immediately diagnose the cause, but not then.
My first one, friend prime he had surely done package units but probably his first knockdown. Was toast a year later from no rope between the sections.
Your TDR is good to go just as soon as you get it listed as a boiler feedwater pump controller.