Nicely done, man! 😊 And yeah, the cold weather is definitely not funny! It's been pretty cold down here in Brazil the last days... But it's getting better. Anyway, stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
welds oriented toward the center... just by looking at your video it appears that they would then be opposite the air inlet. So, it could be fuel related or it could be due to air flow, or it could just be the result of a very fussy engineer who decided that would be the only thing acceptable to him. Otherwise, thanks for this video. I'm not good at following black and white diagrams and descriptions found in manuals, but seeing it done changes everything and now I can confidently do the same to my unit. It stopped igniting this season and isn't throwing any codes. I've temporarily replaced it with one of those cheap knockoffs from Amazon, though I plan to reinstall this unit once I get it functional again.
That's a pretty neat looking little heater. I've never seen one quite like it. For the space you are using it in Hopefully it does the trick at keeping it warn enough to work in your shop at least where it is tolerable in the cold. Oh by the way I think I finally found a surveyor to get my property surveyed so hopefully before too long I will be able to build a shop/garage so I'll have a space to be able to work in.
For the socket you could go to Lowes or some place that sells individual sockets and grind a slot with an angle grinder. Probably cheaper than buying the branded tool. Also to keep from having to disassemble it again next season. Print some TPU caps for all the openings. Then you'll just have external dust to get off.
Great easy to follow vid. Thanks.
Nicely done, man! 😊
And yeah, the cold weather is definitely not funny! It's been pretty cold down here in Brazil the last days... But it's getting better.
Anyway, stay safe there with your family! 🖖😊
welds oriented toward the center... just by looking at your video it appears that they would then be opposite the air inlet. So, it could be fuel related or it could be due to air flow, or it could just be the result of a very fussy engineer who decided that would be the only thing acceptable to him.
Otherwise, thanks for this video. I'm not good at following black and white diagrams and descriptions found in manuals, but seeing it done changes everything and now I can confidently do the same to my unit. It stopped igniting this season and isn't throwing any codes. I've temporarily replaced it with one of those cheap knockoffs from Amazon, though I plan to reinstall this unit once I get it functional again.
That's a pretty neat looking little heater. I've never seen one quite like it. For the space you are using it in Hopefully it does the trick at keeping it warn enough to work in your shop at least where it is tolerable in the cold. Oh by the way I think I finally found a surveyor to get my property surveyed so hopefully before too long I will be able to build a shop/garage so I'll have a space to be able to work in.
For the socket you could go to Lowes or some place that sells individual sockets and grind a slot with an angle grinder. Probably cheaper than buying the branded tool. Also to keep from having to disassemble it again next season. Print some TPU caps for all the openings. Then you'll just have external dust to get off.
Where is your shop