Australia’s leading barbecue, Beefeater barbecues help guide – BeefEater Gas Barbecues User Manual

Page 14

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Australia’s Leading Barbecue

14

Beefeater Barbecues

Help Guide

Your BeefEater barbecue has undergone a series of quality checking points prior to leaving the factory. Should you have a

problem with your appliance please refer to the help guide below before calling your dealer or service person.
Important - Shut off the gas supply before performing any checks.

Problem

Cause

Check

Barbecue will not light

Ignition system not working

Check to see visible spark at starter probe - if no spark is
present when control knob is turned then the unit may need to
be serviced or replaced. Contact your BeefEater dealer.
Check that there is a visible flame coming from the pilot
ignition tube.
Check that the pilot ignition tube is not blocked by spider webs
or insect nests. Clear obstruction as required.

Turning on gas control too quickly

Allow at least 5 seconds for gas to flow through burner before
ignition.

No gas flow

Check that valve on gas cylinder is turned on.
Check that burner ports are free of obstructions.
Check that all gas injectors are clean and free of obstructions.

Burners not assembled correctly

Check that burners are correctly positioned in the barbecue
frame.

Burner ports or throat blocked

Check that the burner ports are not blocked by spider webs or
insect nests. Clean out as required.

Barbecue lights but goes out
soon after starting

Fuel supply turned off

Turn on gas valve at cylinder (LPG/Propane) or shutoff valve
on gas line (Natural Gas).

Gas cylinder low or empty

Refill cylinder with gas (LPG/Propane).

Kink in gas hose

Check that the gas line is not kinked or twisted.

Wind or breeze affecting operation

Ensure that the appliance is located out of the way of wind.

Burners will not cross light
from one to the other

Check that cross light channel is in place.
Check that burner ports are free of obstructions.

Low flame level or low heat
output

Check you are running on correct gas (NG or LPG/Propane).
Check gas injector size is correct.

Stainless steel discolours

Overheating appliance

Do not exceed maximum operating temperatures.

Rusting of cooking surfaces
(standard cast iron only)

Clean and reseason cast iron cooking surfaces.

How Long Will The Gas In My Cylinder Last?

If you have a full cylinder of propane, just look at the table below to see how many hours of gas you have, depending

on how many burners you have alight. These figures are approximate only

.

You may notice that if you have several burners alight and your cylinder becomes low on gas, the liquid may freeze up.

If this occurs, turn the cylinder and all burners off and wait till the liquid thaws. You may then reignite the burners.

These tables were worked out using the following:

Each burner on high setting uses 19 MJ/hour or 18,000 BTU/hour

Each burner on low setting uses 6 MJ/hour or 5,700 BTU/hr

Each kg of gas contains 50MJ. Each lb of gas contains 21,600 BTU

9 kg/20lb bottle

4 kg/9lb bottle

High

Low

High

Low

1 burner

25 hours

75 hours

11 hours

33 hours

2 burners

12.5 hours

37.5 hours

5.5 hours

17 hours

3 burners

8.3 hours

25 hours

3.7 hours

11 hours

4 burners

6.3 hours

19 hours

2.75 hours

8 hours

5 burners

5 hours

15 hours

2.25 hours

6.6 hours

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