Hi All, I have a Heat & Glo 'Escape' gas insert. I'm generally happy with it. On certain days, for periods of the day, the pilot light will go off, but not long enough for the electric ignition to need to click and start it again. It goes off, and then with a little 'poof' it goes back on again. Again, there is never a click of the ignitor. It goes off for less than a second.
I have not been able to determine any pattern. Sometimes it happens on a perfectly calm day with no wind and on some days where the wind is howling it stays lit constantly. Yesterday it was going out every 2-3 minutes. Today it has been lit constantly for hours.
I can't be sure if this is related but I'll mention it. When we have had storms and lost power, we have noticed that the gas flow (and resulting flame when lit) is substantially less than when we have power. When the winds are bad enough, which is usually when we lose power, we sometimes have trouble keeping the insert lit. Not just the pilot, the fire itself. This has been a bit of a disappointment. We love the fireplace for heating, but one of the main purposes was as a backup for losing power. Last time we lost power the flame never got higher than an inch and it was wispy and blue. As soon as the power came back on, the flame was back to normal.
It seems to me that the incoming gas supply is varying. Is it possible that the gas company is doing that? When electricity in an area is out, do gas companies throttle back gas delivery pressure to an area for some safety reason?
Where this happens only on certain days/times, it seems less likely to me that this is related to my equipment, although certainly possible. We are in Massachusetts if that matters from a gas delivery standpoint.
Any thoughts? Thanks,
Rob
I have not been able to determine any pattern. Sometimes it happens on a perfectly calm day with no wind and on some days where the wind is howling it stays lit constantly. Yesterday it was going out every 2-3 minutes. Today it has been lit constantly for hours.
I can't be sure if this is related but I'll mention it. When we have had storms and lost power, we have noticed that the gas flow (and resulting flame when lit) is substantially less than when we have power. When the winds are bad enough, which is usually when we lose power, we sometimes have trouble keeping the insert lit. Not just the pilot, the fire itself. This has been a bit of a disappointment. We love the fireplace for heating, but one of the main purposes was as a backup for losing power. Last time we lost power the flame never got higher than an inch and it was wispy and blue. As soon as the power came back on, the flame was back to normal.
It seems to me that the incoming gas supply is varying. Is it possible that the gas company is doing that? When electricity in an area is out, do gas companies throttle back gas delivery pressure to an area for some safety reason?
Where this happens only on certain days/times, it seems less likely to me that this is related to my equipment, although certainly possible. We are in Massachusetts if that matters from a gas delivery standpoint.
Any thoughts? Thanks,
Rob
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