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- Location
- Meadows of Dan, Virginia
I have used two different fuel valves on this heater and discovered this morning that the wiring to the solenoids had accidentally been switched last time one was installed, so the valve never turned on...
The wiring was corrected, but it still didn't ignite. I suspect that during the several "dry" starting attempts over the last few weeks, the wick may have been charred.
Removed the igniter section and found no wick, but a porous disc with a tab located 3/4 inch from the igniter coil. It's all pretty charred.
The igniter will be tested next....
For all the high quality parts in these heaters, it all comes down to a cotton or fiberglass wick for it all to work, crazy. Wonder how a spark igniter would work....(Multifuel flame heater style)...
Okay, the igniter glows red, so everything seems to be working. Now I'm thinking that it may take a lot longer to get the coolant heater going than the personnel heater....much less fuel delivery...I have no good reference for times to start the various heaters...
1530 hrs: After putting it all back together, I tested it twice this afternoon and each time it ignited (could hear rumble from the flame) after 110 to 115 seconds, the light came on after another 30 to 35 seconds.
However, it only ran for 15 seconds or so after which the overheat thermostat (??)
turned off the fuel solenoid... Same thing happened with and without the circulation pump running.
Need to check the thermostat. It is supposed to turn the heater off when the coolant gets to about 175°F.
Maybe there is some obstruction......
Next day, several test runs later:
Tested the thermostat and it appears okay. Measured the voltage at the "S" solenoid and it's not what's turning it off.
Every time I run the unit, the pattern is the same, flame can be heard 15 to 30 seconds later and the light turns on 30 to 40 seconds after that. It still only runs 10 to 15 seconds. The flame is snuffed out somehow....
Checked fuel pressure and it's 7 psi.
Voltage drops about 1 volt when igniter is on. Fan speeds up slightly when igniter goes off and switch is placed in "RUN" position.
Increased fuel delivery slightly, but no difference. Turned fuel delivery back to calibration setting (7 cc/min in "LO").
Removed cover on air intake end to improve air supply, no difference.
Based on my notes after six starting attempts, the time from "flame is heard" to flame detector switching is 35 to 40 seconds. This may not be enough for the combustion to become self sustaining.
Checking the TMs, this time period can be up to 200 seconds! As usual, the manuals don't explain what is supposed to happen during this time, but a re-calibration of the flame detector seems in order....
The wiring was corrected, but it still didn't ignite. I suspect that during the several "dry" starting attempts over the last few weeks, the wick may have been charred.
Removed the igniter section and found no wick, but a porous disc with a tab located 3/4 inch from the igniter coil. It's all pretty charred.
The igniter will be tested next....
For all the high quality parts in these heaters, it all comes down to a cotton or fiberglass wick for it all to work, crazy. Wonder how a spark igniter would work....(Multifuel flame heater style)...
Okay, the igniter glows red, so everything seems to be working. Now I'm thinking that it may take a lot longer to get the coolant heater going than the personnel heater....much less fuel delivery...I have no good reference for times to start the various heaters...
1530 hrs: After putting it all back together, I tested it twice this afternoon and each time it ignited (could hear rumble from the flame) after 110 to 115 seconds, the light came on after another 30 to 35 seconds.
However, it only ran for 15 seconds or so after which the overheat thermostat (??)
turned off the fuel solenoid... Same thing happened with and without the circulation pump running.
Need to check the thermostat. It is supposed to turn the heater off when the coolant gets to about 175°F.
Maybe there is some obstruction......
Next day, several test runs later:
Tested the thermostat and it appears okay. Measured the voltage at the "S" solenoid and it's not what's turning it off.
Every time I run the unit, the pattern is the same, flame can be heard 15 to 30 seconds later and the light turns on 30 to 40 seconds after that. It still only runs 10 to 15 seconds. The flame is snuffed out somehow....
Checked fuel pressure and it's 7 psi.
Voltage drops about 1 volt when igniter is on. Fan speeds up slightly when igniter goes off and switch is placed in "RUN" position.
Increased fuel delivery slightly, but no difference. Turned fuel delivery back to calibration setting (7 cc/min in "LO").
Removed cover on air intake end to improve air supply, no difference.
Based on my notes after six starting attempts, the time from "flame is heard" to flame detector switching is 35 to 40 seconds. This may not be enough for the combustion to become self sustaining.
Checking the TMs, this time period can be up to 200 seconds! As usual, the manuals don't explain what is supposed to happen during this time, but a re-calibration of the flame detector seems in order....
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