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Jeff June 7th 05 12:30 AM

pilot going out in water heater
 
I have a 4 year old maytag water heater, has been fine since it was new.
Starting yesterday the pilot light has gone out 4 times. The only other
thing is that I turned on my central air conditioning yesterday. The water
heater and the furnace are in the basement. What is going on? I guess I
call the plumber?

Thanks,

Jeff



SQLit June 7th 05 12:54 AM


"Jeff" wrote in message
. ..
I have a 4 year old maytag water heater, has been fine since it was new.
Starting yesterday the pilot light has gone out 4 times. The only other
thing is that I turned on my central air conditioning yesterday. The

water
heater and the furnace are in the basement. What is going on? I guess I
call the plumber?

Thanks,

Jeff


Turn the a/c off and see if the problem goes away... If it does then you
have a draft issue and you need to call a plumber quick.

The a/c may be pulling the fumes into the duct work.



Speedy Jim June 7th 05 12:55 AM

Jeff wrote:

I have a 4 year old maytag water heater, has been fine since it was new.
Starting yesterday the pilot light has gone out 4 times. The only other
thing is that I turned on my central air conditioning yesterday. The water
heater and the furnace are in the basement. What is going on? I guess I
call the plumber?

Thanks,

Jeff


Sit in front of the heater (leave the inner baffle plate
in place) and watch the pilot.
Have someone else switch the blower fan for the A/C on.
See if that deflects the flame.

(The A/C blower shouldn't affect the house pressurization,
but the coincidence is too strijing to ignore.)

Jim

Jeff June 7th 05 01:10 AM

I watched the pilot with the furnace fan off and on and did not see much
difference. I lit a match and definitely see a slight draft up into the
water heater, so that must be good. The pilot is burning with a low blue
flame and every once in a while spits out a little yellow. Maybe the gas
line has a problem?



joe June 7th 05 01:13 AM

Jeff wrote:
I watched the pilot with the furnace fan off and on and did not see much
difference. I lit a match and definitely see a slight draft up into the
water heater, so that must be good. The pilot is burning with a low blue
flame and every once in a while spits out a little yellow. Maybe the gas
line has a problem?


is that natural gas or propane?

Jeff June 7th 05 01:58 AM

Natural gas

"joe" wrote in message
. ..
Jeff wrote:
I watched the pilot with the furnace fan off and on and did not see much
difference. I lit a match and definitely see a slight draft up into the
water heater, so that must be good. The pilot is burning with a low blue
flame and every once in a while spits out a little yellow. Maybe the gas
line has a problem?

is that natural gas or propane?




joe June 7th 05 03:16 AM

Jeff wrote:

Natural gas

"joe" wrote in message
. ..

Jeff wrote:

I watched the pilot with the furnace fan off and on and did not see much
difference. I lit a match and definitely see a slight draft up into the
water heater, so that must be good. The pilot is burning with a low blue
flame and every once in a while spits out a little yellow. Maybe the gas
line has a problem?


is that natural gas or propane?




never mind :)

Tater Salad June 7th 05 04:25 AM

mine did that. i changed the thermalcouple and it didnt help. i had
to take the burner and pilot feed tube off and blow em out. that fixed
it. tader


CL (dnoyeB) Gilbert June 7th 05 01:01 PM

Jeff wrote:
I watched the pilot with the furnace fan off and on and did not see much
difference. I lit a match and definitely see a slight draft up into the
water heater, so that must be good. The pilot is burning with a low blue
flame and every once in a while spits out a little yellow. Maybe the gas
line has a problem?



Well pay close attention to other things in the house when you turn a/c
on. Make sure windows are closed and chimney damper is closed.
Sometimes it takes a strange situation to get the downdraft started.

--
Respectfully,


CL Gilbert


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