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-   -   To Charlie Bress: Piezo Ignition, etc. ? (https://www.diybanter.com/home-repair/128492-charlie-bress-piezo-ignition-etc.html)

Robert11 November 8th 05 08:55 PM

To Charlie Bress: Piezo Ignition, etc. ?
 
Hi,

Thanks for info on recent post re piezo ignition on
contemplated hot water heater. Appreciate it.

Have a pretty good understanding, think, regarding the piezoelectric
effect.

But, am uncertain how it's utilized for these heaters.

Is it that when no heat is called for, the main gas valve is off, and there
is also No pilot light.

Then, when heat for the water is called for by the therm, the main valve
opens, and the piezo element provides the voltage for a spark ?

I'm pretty sure I'm missing something here.

How is the piezo "deformed" to provide the high voltage for the spark during
normal operation ?

If you might describe the sequence op operation for me, I'd be most
appreciative.

BTW: Is there still an always-on pilot light with this type of system, or
is it as I described above ? Still confused, I guess.

Thanks,
Bob



Charlie Bress November 9th 05 01:18 AM

To Charlie Bress: Piezo Ignition, etc. ?
 
These things are common on gas barbecues. The device is made so that when
you push the button it hits the element with a sharp whack. That generates a
high voltage that in turn jumps across a spark gap that is in the gas flow.
The resulting electric arc ignites the gas.
I actually have two. One is on the gas grill, the other is built into a
propane torch.
Turn on the gas, hit the button, ignite the gas..
A lot easier to do than describe.

Charlie

"Robert11" wrote in message
...
Hi,

Thanks for info on recent post re piezo ignition on
contemplated hot water heater. Appreciate it.

Have a pretty good understanding, think, regarding the piezoelectric
effect.

But, am uncertain how it's utilized for these heaters.

Is it that when no heat is called for, the main gas valve is off, and
there is also No pilot light.

Then, when heat for the water is called for by the therm, the main valve
opens, and the piezo element provides the voltage for a spark ?

I'm pretty sure I'm missing something here.

How is the piezo "deformed" to provide the high voltage for the spark
during normal operation ?

If you might describe the sequence op operation for me, I'd be most
appreciative.

BTW: Is there still an always-on pilot light with this type of system,
or is it as I described above ? Still confused, I guess.

Thanks,
Bob





nospambob November 9th 05 05:00 PM

To Charlie Bress: Piezo Ignition, etc. ?
 
New water heater installed last month has the "press the button to
start" feature.

On Tue, 8 Nov 2005 20:18:53 -0500, "Charlie Bress"
wrote:

These things are common on gas barbecues. The device is made so that when
you push the button it hits the element with a sharp whack. That generates a
high voltage that in turn jumps across a spark gap that is in the gas flow.
The resulting electric arc ignites the gas.
I actually have two. One is on the gas grill, the other is built into a
propane torch.
Turn on the gas, hit the button, ignite the gas..
A lot easier to do than describe.

Charlie

"Robert11" wrote in message
...
Hi,

Thanks for info on recent post re piezo ignition on
contemplated hot water heater. Appreciate it.



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