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Old 09-22-2024, 07:35 AM   #1
twindman
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Angry Water heater tripping the CO and propane alarm

Heater tries to light then seemed like it stayed on. Within a minute the alarm goes off. I was hoping it was just old but it only happens when I turn on the gas to the heater.
Sooo, what can I look at outside. I know the furnace has things like a sail switch and other things to check. And check for spider webs and other obstructions.
What other advice?????
 
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Old 09-22-2024, 08:10 AM   #2
Bourbon County
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I believe the first action should be to determine what if anything is causing the alarm. Some of the models will beep in 4 beep patterns and flash the LED if it's alarming on CO, and have a continuous beep and solid LED if it's alarming for gas. A very good investment is a combustible gas detector like this:

https://www.amazon.com/Detector-PT52...01&sr=8-5&th=1

One of these will be very helpful in finding the source of any leaks and you should be able to go the exact fitting or device that's leaking. Don't just start replacing parts blindly.

Here's a handheld CO detector:

https://www.amazon.com/CT-300-Portab...1zcF9hdGY&th=1

How old is the detector in your RV? They are normally only last about 5-7 years; my experience is the lower end of that time frame.

If it's not the detector, this is a serious issue for your safety, especially the CO. It's a silent killer, but likely the most painless way to go.

As far as your water heater, if it's a tank model, they're pretty simple, no sail switches, blowers, and no standing pilot flame. They are fairly well sealed from the inside of the coach and would be somewhat difficult to leak either CO or gas into the interior. LP gas is heavier than air and I would think any leakage would find it's way to the ground before leaking into the coach. If the detector is alarming on gas and it only goes off when the burner lights, I would suspect the gas valve in the water heater. CO is a byproduct of combustion and the furnace and stove are the only other things in the RV that can produce it.

You have a potentially dangerous situation, please be diligent in finding and fixing this problem.
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Old 09-22-2024, 08:46 AM   #3
Carl n Susan
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A friend's Montana had the water heater under the kitchen cabinet (with outside access). The CO detector was located on the opposing island cabinet. When the wind blew from the WH side it would occasionally trip the CO alarm when the WH was running on gas.
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Old 09-29-2024, 01:54 PM   #4
rpkittle1
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Propane alarm

This happened to us. I switched on the water heater (on propane) like normal. Five minutes later the alarm went off. The water heater had not lit and the gas did not stop. I thought I needed a new control board. Instead I got behind the water heater and unplugged and plugged every wire connection I could find. Problem solved. The connections had corroded and the fire would not lite. Works great now.
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Old 09-30-2024, 03:37 PM   #5
twindman
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I think my problem is what Carl and Susan said. I tried it a different a day and it worked fine. Then another day the alarm tripped. Guess what. A strong wind blowing directly into the side of the rig. And with 2 slides out right beside the opening that is about 3 feet wide acting like a funnel.
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Old 09-30-2024, 05:23 PM   #6
Carl n Susan
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Yup, Tom, my friends RV had the same configuration with two slides bordering the WH. You would think they would protect the WH but not when the wind is just right.
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