Forum Discussion
tatest
Mar 02, 2014Explorer II
That behavior is from failure to sense ignition. That you get a flame means you have spark, gas, air mixture. But if controller fails to sense ignition a few seconds after sparking, it will shut the gas off.
I would first check the ignitor/flame sensor, before giving up on the control board. An open circuit in the ignitor or its lead will prevent the sensing of the flame, yet the spark can jump a gap in the lead.
Been there, fixed it, on a couple different Atwwod water heaters.
Atwwod DSI models do not use a thermocouple to sense heat. They measure resistance across the spark gap to detected the flame itself. Discontinuity, or improper location of the gap, can cause failure to get the resistance measurement that says "yes, it ignited, there is a flame."
I would first check the ignitor/flame sensor, before giving up on the control board. An open circuit in the ignitor or its lead will prevent the sensing of the flame, yet the spark can jump a gap in the lead.
Been there, fixed it, on a couple different Atwwod water heaters.
Atwwod DSI models do not use a thermocouple to sense heat. They measure resistance across the spark gap to detected the flame itself. Discontinuity, or improper location of the gap, can cause failure to get the resistance measurement that says "yes, it ignited, there is a flame."
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