oops more-- Furnace trouble

gene

New member
Sep 29, 1999
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OOps more

I forgot ,, sometimes the furnace pulls away from the side of the coach and
the exhaust is blown into the inside of the coach.
This could be fixed by taking out the furnace and resetting it.

The failure inside the furnace is a baffle plate rusts out or off and the
combustion products go into the heated air. This cannot be fixed, it is an
internal failure.

Both situations are very dangerous

gene

>I have a 76 PB with the original furnace. When it comes on, it sort of
>flutters or slightly rumbles. If I turn the thermostat down and then back
>quickly, everything is fine (no flutters). I have adjusted the screw on the
>side under the seat while looking thru the sight hole, but the flame still
>has some yellow at times. I took it to a RV repair shop and he vacuumed the
>furnace thru the exhaust hole and adjusted the flame again. I tried it when
>I got home......it still flutters and set the CO alarm off. Is there
>something I can do besides replace the unit? I'm open to all suggestions.
>Thanks for your help. Don R.......76PB
>
Genef -- 77PB/ore/ca
GMC MOTORHOME INFORMATION
mr.erf
http://www.california.com/~eagle/
 
This happened to us, and we only noticed from outside the coach when we saw
the panel around the vents was actually melting/burning. That was the last
straw for us, as we scrapped the propane system entirely for a webasto, hot
water heater. It is totally quiet, and puts out a lot more heat than the
propane set up ever did. The heat also lasts, and does not dissipate as
quickly as forced hot air did. It was a lot of work, but worth it.

Tony B

- ----- Original Message -----
From: gene
To:
Sent: Wednesday, December 22, 1999 11:40 PM
Subject: GMC: oops more-- Furnace trouble

> OOps more
>
> I forgot ,, sometimes the furnace pulls away from the side of the coach
and
> the exhaust is blown into the inside of the coach.
> This could be fixed by taking out the furnace and resetting it.
>
> Both situations are very dangerous
>
> gene
>
>
> >I have a 76 PB with the original furnace. When it comes on, it sort of
> >flutters or slightly rumbles. If I turn the thermostat down and then
back
> >quickly, everything is fine (no flutters). I have adjusted the screw on
the
> >side under the seat while looking thru the sight hole, but the flame
still
> >has some yellow at times. I took it to a RV repair shop and he vacuumed
the
> >furnace thru the exhaust hole and adjusted the flame again. I tried it
when
> >I got home......it still flutters and set the CO alarm off. Is there
> >something I can do besides replace the unit? I'm open to all
suggestions.
> >Thanks for your help. Don R.......76PB
> >
> Genef -- 77PB/ore/ca
> GMC MOTORHOME INFORMATION
> mr.erf
> http://www.california.com/~eagle/
>
 
Tony:

Did you install an air or water system?? Either way, how is the heating
distributed throughout the coach?? What model Webasto heater did you use??
Does it use propane??

Paul Bartz

From: Tony Bad [mailto:antnip]
Sent: Thursday, December 23, 1999 9:26 AM

This happened to us, and we only noticed from outside the coach when we saw
the panel around the vents was actually melting/burning. That was the last
straw for us, as we scrapped the propane system entirely for a webasto, hot
water heater. It is totally quiet, and puts out a lot more heat than the
propane set up ever did. The heat also lasts, and does not dissipate as
quickly as forced hot air did. It was a lot of work, but worth it.
 
We installed a diesel fired hot water system, the model is a Thermo S90. I
totally scrapped the propane system, as I have an AC/DC fridge, so without
the heater, all I ran off propane was the stove. (That too was replaced with
electric, but that is another story) We removed the propane tank, and put
the heater in there. A diesel tank, 10 gal, was put under the coach in the
rear, with the filler in the old propane locker. This thing will run for a
long time on 10 gallons.

The hot water is circulated thru radiator hose to 2 heat exchangers made by
a company called red dot. they are very low amperage fans integrated into
the exchangers. I get almost instant heat, and plenty of it, and it stays
hot for hours.

Another bonus is that I no longer have to adhere to propane restrictions and
can go through tunnels. This is a plus here in the NY area.

In the future, I am hoping to install a loop to the hot water heater/ engine
loop so I can pre-heat the engine and make hot water.

Like I said, it was a lot of work to install, but it is a great system. Let
me know if you have any more questions.

Tony B.

- ----- Original Message -----
From: Bartz, Paul
To:
Sent: Thursday, December 23, 1999 10:21 AM
Subject: RE: GMC: oops more-- Furnace trouble

> Tony:
>
> Did you install an air or water system?? Either way, how is the heating
> distributed throughout the coach?? What model Webasto heater did you
use??
> Does it use propane??
>
> Paul Bartz
>
> From: Tony Bad [mailto:antnip]
> Sent: Thursday, December 23, 1999 9:26 AM
>
> This happened to us, and we only noticed from outside the coach when we
saw
> the panel around the vents was actually melting/burning. That was the last
> straw for us, as we scrapped the propane system entirely for a webasto,
hot
> water heater. It is totally quiet, and puts out a lot more heat than the
> propane set up ever did. The heat also lasts, and does not dissipate as
> quickly as forced hot air did. It was a lot of work, but worth it.
>
>