Oct-19-2013 02:10 PM
Oct-29-2013 12:03 AM
Arch Stanton wrote:
Still not heating up?
Again, make sure the tank is full of water and the propane supply valve is on, then go out and open the access door and have someone else turn the heater on. You should hear the ignitor fire a couple of times, providing a spark, and then the flame ignite. The flame should be clean, and strong, no soot and not much, if any, yellow to it. If it doesn't light, start following the troubleshooting procedure in the paperwork. As I said, it doesn't take long to have hot water with these things, about 10 min to warm and 15-20 to full on hot.
Oct-28-2013 07:37 AM
Oct-25-2013 11:18 PM
Oct-21-2013 10:46 AM
Arch Stanton wrote:
Thanks, O/B.
The last Water Heater I had in my other RV was an Atwood, it had an Anode and was also aluminum. Came that way new. I will pay attention to the threads, been playing with these things for around 30 years and have managed to avoid wiping out the threads so far, but I have a set of NPT thread chasers if something should go wrong.
Oct-21-2013 09:03 AM
Oct-21-2013 09:01 AM
Oct-21-2013 08:06 AM
Oct-20-2013 09:10 PM
Arch Stanton wrote:
I have a new Eclipse Attitude 32AKLG and unless you upgraded the water heater I believe the standard unit is propane only, no electric element. Our heater is an Atwood. Ours is propane only. I always make dang sure the water tank is full before firing up the burner. Takes about 15 for it to heat up nicely.
Also, my propane-only unit came with a plastic drain plug, no sacrificial anode attached to the plug.
I changed that out right away.
Oct-20-2013 07:49 PM
Oct-20-2013 03:22 PM
Old-Biscuit wrote:
No..not like fridge
Water heaters have separate switches..no 'auto' select
One ON/OFF switch for electric element
One ON/OFF switch for propane
With only one switch inside I suspect you have a Suburban Brand and the electric ON/OFF switch is located in the outside compartment
Oct-20-2013 09:44 AM
TruckinRazor wrote:
It has always had water in it when hooked to electric, So I don't believe the element would have been "dry,on". So the one switch inside is not like the fridge? That only has one switch aswell.
Oct-19-2013 11:48 PM
Oct-19-2013 11:03 PM
TruckinRazor wrote:Strabo wrote:
Make sure propane is on also unless your using electric to make hot water, in that case you dont use the propane switch on the wall.
How do you have it setup, propane or electric?
To better explain, I just switched from a Jayco to this Eclipse and everything is completely different. On the Jayco both propane and electric switches for the water heater we nect to each other and you could choose. This Eclipse has one switch and I'm assuming it switches itself to whatever is available? If no electric is detected then it uses propane? Does this sound right or is the propane switch somewhere else?
Oct-19-2013 10:45 PM
Strabo wrote:
Make sure propane is on also unless your using electric to make hot water, in that case you dont use the propane switch on the wall.
How do you have it setup, propane or electric?