help im stuck, Hydro Flame 7312 parts
help im stuck, Hydro Flame 7312 parts
Ryflyby |
Oct 1 2017, 03:42 PM
Post
#1
|
Group: Members Posts: 4 Joined: 1-October 17 Member No.: 9,803 Favorite Truck Camper(s): little caboose Type and Brand of Truck(s) Owned: 1990 Chevy Silverado K2500 Type of Tiedowns used: Custom Truck and Camper Setup: K2500, camper |
looking to find a gas valve for my furnace. have heat but thermostat doesn't shut off valve when satisfied. would like to find replacement. Any help would be appreciated. THx
|
SidecarFlip |
Dec 31 2017, 09:36 PM
Post
#2
|
Group: Members Posts: 472 Joined: 15-October 16 Member No.: 9,221 Favorite Truck Camper(s): Forest River Palomino SS Type and Brand of Truck(s) Owned: 1997 Ford F350 4x4 LB SRW CC 7.3 diesel Type of Tiedowns used: HappyJac standard Truck and Camper Setup: 1997 Ford F350 4 door 4x4 Crew Cab 7.3 Diesel, Lance 915 loaded, 2015 Palomino SS1500 Loaded |
I just learned something I never knew myself.... I take it the duplex valve is for safety reasons?
|
RV_Tech |
Jan 1 2018, 07:33 AM
Post
#3
|
Group: Members Posts: 201 Joined: 27-July 12 Member No.: 6,199 Favorite Truck Camper(s): Hallmark, Northstar, Outfitter Type and Brand of Truck(s) Owned: F-350 SRW 6.2 Supercab Type of Tiedowns used: Happijack front, Torklift rear Truck and Camper Setup: Hallmark Ute XL No modes to truck Torklift Fast Guns Fast guns had to be cut down to absolute minimum (14 1/2") to use with Happijac front tie down and Hallmark camper. |
QUOTE(SidecarFlip @ Dec 31 2017, 10:36 PM) Yes for safety, same with water heater. Actually everything in the propane systems defaults towards "off or lower pressure". For example, has anyone ever seen a propane regulator that puts out more rather than less pressure when it fails? When they get old, they put out less and less pressure, not more. Back to the furnace staying on, all it takes is mouse chewed wires to short the two that feed the furnace from the thermostat to keep it going and that is a common cause. A staple through the wires will do the same thing. Want to test for it? Go right to the side of the furnace where the thermostat and power comes in. Disconnect one of the blue leads from the thermostat wire. Did it end the runaway furnace? If it did, it is a thermostat wire issue, not a furnace issue. The furnace is just doing what it was being told to do. Every single component in the furnace is designed to open the circuit and shut down without power. It has to be that way for safety. Makes sense right? |
Lo-Fi Version | Time is now: 28th April 2024 - 08:58 PM |