0

Recently the gas company replaced our meter and thermocouple. After they left, the pilot light kept going out randomly. 4 techs came over a 3 day period and could not diagnose except to reassure that the meter and thermocouple were working fine. Then HVAC man came and found lose wires on the gas control valve, apparently knocked lose by the gas co tech. Furnace will cycle perfectly and pilot stays on as long as the thermostat temp is maintained at the same temp, but whenever I bump the temp up a couple of degrees, the pilot goes out either during the cycle or upon shut off.

1 Answer 1

1

This is a tough one without being there to see it.... The only thing that I can come up with is that you have a 2 stage or modulating gas valve and that when you have your thermostat set at a constant temperature your furnace is only operating on the 1st stage gas flow, but when you bump the setpoint on your thermostat up to a higher setting then the 2nd stage or higher modulation is called for and therefor a higher gas pressure is admitted to the main burners. This second stage pressure may be set incorrectly (too high) and causing the pilot flame to be pulled away from the thermocouple during the heating cycle which will cause the pilot thermocouple to cool off enough to cause the pilot safety to shut down the main gas valve and pilot burner. One other thing could be that if you do have a 2 stage or modulating gas valve and the main burner is shut off before the gas pressure is stepped down to the first stage then the sudden main burner shut down could cause turbulence and be snuffing out the pilot at the end of the cycle. This shut down could be from numerous things like a high temperature limit or other safety device shutting down the main burner while it is in the higher stage burn.

2
  • Thanks for this in-depth reply. Your thoughts make good sense and I do suspect that something is going on with the gas valve. Assuming your theory is correct, could this have been triggered by the replacement of the gas meter and gas regulator and if so, what can be done to fix the problem? Thanks for your help.
    – user49149
    Commented Feb 18, 2016 at 14:55
  • Possible. The furnace gas manifold pressure should be checked and set to the manufacturer's specification. If you do have a dual pressure or modulating gas valve then both pressures will need to be checked and set accordingly.
    – Trejnt
    Commented Feb 19, 2016 at 17:56

Your Answer

By clicking “Post Your Answer”, you agree to our terms of service and acknowledge you have read our privacy policy.

Not the answer you're looking for? Browse other questions tagged or ask your own question.