njjeeper
Member
- 31
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- 8
- Location
- Morristown,NJ
Same thing happened to me last year. I chased it for a while but it ended up being the ignitor. The transformer itself is in a metal box with 2 tubes that extend into the combustion housing(the high tension ignitor wires are in these tubes). At first I thought it was the noise supression circuit that filters the AC and I changed that. No dice. What made it hard to track down was that when I pulled the ignitor out and bench tested it, it would work. Then I would re-install it and all was well for the first few times i used it. Then back to no spark. Finally I pulled it out, hooked it up and let it run with a jacobs ladder I built with my son. After about 20 mins it stopped and wouldn't start again. Likely an internal short that showed up when it was hot. They are pretty specific piece of kit so if you cant find a replacement then you will have to get creative but really anything with enough volts to jump the gap and run continuous should work. I happen to find new ignitors online for a different heater but the transformer was the same so I used my housing and the new transformer. I suspect this is a bad batch of transformers and many of us with this heater will have this problem in the future since this is not the first time I have heard of this issue with someone else's unit.
TJ
TJ