"He who marches out of step hears another drum." ~ Ken Kesey
The old american texair is giving us fits today. It starts up normally and runs for a few minutes and heats up then just shuts down and throws the alarm. I've handled a number of issues with this dryer on my own and I don't know if I just don't have the stomach to do it today or if I've finally run into something I can't handle. We were just getting back ahead of schedule now this. I'm convinced we need a new dryer, with as many jobs as we've done over the past 6 months, I believe we are going to continue this growth and we can't be down like this. Plus this dryer is gas and electric with 4 radiant panels so I know this thing has to be an electricity hog. Our electricity bill for this building is over $1100 a month with maybe 1000-1200 sq/ft of it being air conditioned. I wish I knew for sure how much this dryer was costing us a month in electricity, but I've never sat down and tried to figure it out. Guess I better do that soon.This dryer is electrically complicated to me, you open the panel and it's 20 miles of wires that looks like a birds nest, it's very intimidating. I do believe we've got a gas flow, maybe an air flow problem here and I hope it's not electric. And there are so many contactors, gas/air valves and things to go down on this dryer I don't know where to even start. Not motivated to F with this F'er today, Friday's are supposed to be trouble free and easy. FML
Alan,Contact Winston Strickland. He is your man. I do not have his number on me but I have posted it many times. It is a 904 number.
Quote from: Printficient on December 02, 2011, 12:14:38 PMAlan,Contact Winston Strickland. He is your man. I do not have his number on me but I have posted it many times. It is a 904 number.I called him the last time our dryer went down and left a message and he never got back to me, but I might try again. I've got a call out to A.W.T. and I will probably call Rich as well.I have the wiring diagram Pierre, so I might be calling you in a bit. It's never acted quite like this. It's never just fired up and ran for a little bit then failed. It either fails in the very beginning or not at all so this is a new one on me. I wish I could tell if maybe there is a gas flow problem, but there is no gauge of any kind to read. I just think it's an air/gas mixture issue, maybe a starvation or excessive flow problem. Kind of weird that it started this today, with it being 100% humidity, cold and raining, but that might be reaching to think it's weather related. But this thing has always been finicky with air circulation so it's not too far fetched to think it could be atmospheric related. It hasn't rained like this during working hours in at least 18 months.
Quote from: alan802 on December 02, 2011, 01:10:11 PMQuote from: Printficient on December 02, 2011, 12:14:38 PMAlan,Contact Winston Strickland. He is your man. I do not have his number on me but I have posted it many times. It is a 904 number.I called him the last time our dryer went down and left a message and he never got back to me, but I might try again. I've got a call out to A.W.T. and I will probably call Rich as well.I have the wiring diagram Pierre, so I might be calling you in a bit. It's never acted quite like this. It's never just fired up and ran for a little bit then failed. It either fails in the very beginning or not at all so this is a new one on me. I wish I could tell if maybe there is a gas flow problem, but there is no gauge of any kind to read. I just think it's an air/gas mixture issue, maybe a starvation or excessive flow problem. Kind of weird that it started this today, with it being 100% humidity, cold and raining, but that might be reaching to think it's weather related. But this thing has always been finicky with air circulation so it's not too far fetched to think it could be atmospheric related. It hasn't rained like this during working hours in at least 18 months.email me the diagram please. You should have a multimeter, if you do not have one, run out and get the cheapest on you can find.pierre
Looking into doing the same Doug, having two of everything ain't a bad idea in this industry.Alan; I can pretty much guarantee that it is a gas issue, and likely with the flame verification circuit. Can you visibly see the flame? If so, verify that it extingushes right at the moment and not before the alarm kicks on. This tells you that the system is getting gas and air as it is supposed to, but the flame checker is malfunctioning. They are touchy instruments. In near your combustion chamber, next to the spark plug that ignites the flame is another plug with a long rod. This is the flame rod that sends an electric signal to the controls to let them know that the flame is in fact lit. It's a very high voltage signal and any fraying or heat damage to the wire can cause issues. Check the flame rod itself for damage as well.Also, if you aren't able to correct the issue with the gas side, you can jump power over to the electric temp controller side (normally shut off unless the gas side is on and operating) and limp along that way. Shut off your gas if you do this.
Quote from: blue moon on December 02, 2011, 01:20:24 PMQuote from: alan802 on December 02, 2011, 01:10:11 PMQuote from: Printficient on December 02, 2011, 12:14:38 PMAlan,Contact Winston Strickland. He is your man. I do not have his number on me but I have posted it many times. It is a 904 number.I called him the last time our dryer went down and left a message and he never got back to me, but I might try again. I've got a call out to A.W.T. and I will probably call Rich as well.I have the wiring diagram Pierre, so I might be calling you in a bit. It's never acted quite like this. It's never just fired up and ran for a little bit then failed. It either fails in the very beginning or not at all so this is a new one on me. I wish I could tell if maybe there is a gas flow problem, but there is no gauge of any kind to read. I just think it's an air/gas mixture issue, maybe a starvation or excessive flow problem. Kind of weird that it started this today, with it being 100% humidity, cold and raining, but that might be reaching to think it's weather related. But this thing has always been finicky with air circulation so it's not too far fetched to think it could be atmospheric related. It hasn't rained like this during working hours in at least 18 months.email me the diagram please. You should have a multimeter, if you do not have one, run out and get the cheapest on you can find.pierreI've got to figure out a way to get it to you, it's a 3'x3' sheet of paper right now so let me get it into a format I can send to you. It looks like freaking chinese arithmetic to me.Quote from: ebscreen on December 02, 2011, 01:15:53 PMLooking into doing the same Doug, having two of everything ain't a bad idea in this industry.Alan; I can pretty much guarantee that it is a gas issue, and likely with the flame verification circuit. Can you visibly see the flame? If so, verify that it extingushes right at the moment and not before the alarm kicks on. This tells you that the system is getting gas and air as it is supposed to, but the flame checker is malfunctioning. They are touchy instruments. In near your combustion chamber, next to the spark plug that ignites the flame is another plug with a long rod. This is the flame rod that sends an electric signal to the controls to let them know that the flame is in fact lit. It's a very high voltage signal and any fraying or heat damage to the wire can cause issues. Check the flame rod itself for damage as well.Also, if you aren't able to correct the issue with the gas side, you can jump power over to the electric temp controller side (normally shut off unless the gas side is on and operating) and limp along that way. Shut off your gas if you do this.Last time the dryer went down I replaced that rod with a new one, but that didn't turn out to be the issue but I left it in there. The flame and the alarm are going out and off right about the same time, they are happening almost simultaneously but not exactly. The flame is going out a split second before the alarm sounds, but the alarm doesn't always function properly so I don't trust it. When looking through the glass you can see that rod tip glowing, but it takes it a while to start glowing, I wonder if it should be glowing right away or if it does take a while?Just got off the phone with American tech support and have a few things to try. He told me to find the air valve with copper tubing coming out of it and make sure the tubing isn't clogged, and I can adjust the amount of air flow by adjusting a screw, so I'm going out and doing that right now, as soon as I find that part he's talking about. I know exactly where the little copper tubes are inside the dryer so I'll just follow them back to the gas piping. Thanks guys for all the help. Pierre, I've got my artist working on getting you that diagram.