Troubleshooting – Langley/Empire MV 130 User Manual

Page 16

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Page 16

TROUBLESHOOTING

SYMPTON 1: PILOT WILL NOT LIGHT

A. Gas is not turned on, or air is trapped in the gas line: the

air trapped in the gas supply may be bled easily at the
minimum rate screw. This is a brass screw located on top of
the gas control situated at 1 o´clock when looking down the
control knob. Unscrew the plug completely and pry out
with a small screw driver. Turn the heater control knob to
“pilot position” and press down until you smell the gas
escaping at that screw hole. NOTE: ALL OPEN FLAMES
IN AREA NEED TO BE EXTINGUISHED. After the odor
is noted, replace brass screw and tighten snugly. Wait 5
minutes for gas to dissipate. Relight heater.

B. Gas control, is not set to proper position: in MV 120 and

MV 130 units, it may be difficult to see the indicator for the
pilot/gas position. Note that it is a marking, found on
the lower side of the gas control, situated at 6 o´clock
when looking down the control.

In MV 145 units, there´s a slot marking in the front of the
ring around the dial marking the reference position.

C. No spark from piezo: look through window for spark

when lighting the pilot. If there is no spark, trace the
insulated sparking wire to the electrode and be certain all
connections are tight.

D. Clogged pilot injector: clean the pilot orifice. Natural gas

orifices are large enough that you can usually clean them by
blowing through them. The LP orifice is so small that the
best is to replace it. Never try to enlarge the hole, or use a
sharp hard object for cleaning.

E. Gas regulator jammed due to high pressure: reset the

regulator.

F. Broken or cracked piezo electrode or broken electrode

wire: replace it.

SYMPTON 2: PILOT WILL NOT STAY LIT WHEN
KNOB IS RELEASED

A. Gas control knob not held down long enough: allow at

least 30 seconds. During initial lighting, or after long
periods of inactivity, the presence of air in the gas supply
pipe may ask for a longer hold.

B. Pilot flame too weak: a weak pilot indicates dirt or an

insufficient gas supply. However, the pilot may be adjusted
by turning the small brass screw on the left hand front top of
the gas control top plate. Backing the screw out
counterclockwise increases the pilot flame. The pilot flame
should contact the thermocouple tip, but not excessively
long. (See Lighting Instructions).

C. Thermocouple not functioning: the thermocouple is a

standard 24 millivolt probe. Check its effectiveness by
removing it from the heater and attach a probe (alligator
clip) to the magnet contact bulb on the gas control end of the
thermocouple. Place the other probe (alligator clip) to the
cooper shield near the heat tip. Holding the tip in a flame

source, such as a candle flame, a good thermocouple should
read 23-30 millivolts. If this is not the case, replace the
thermocouple.

SYMPTON 3: MAIN BURNER WON´T LIGHT

A. Pilot is not lighted.

B. Thermostat turned too low or Gas control knob still on

“pilot” position.

C. Gas supply is inadequate: have gas person confirm gas

pressures.

D. Defective gas control valve: replace it. (This is a very

unlikely occurrence).

SYMPTON 4: MAIN BURNER WON´T STAY LIT

A. Temperature dial turned too low.

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