ApplianceGuru.com:  The Samurai Appliance Repair Forums Home

FAQs | Parts | Service | Store | Newsletter | Sitemap | Beer | Fixitnow.com


Konnichiwa and Welcome!

Please register to post a question. It's FREE!

SEARCH THIS SITE
We have a bizillion pages of specific appliance repair questions and answers here just aching for the furtive caress of your engorged and tingling eyeballs. Use this search box to find ‘em.

FIND PARTS FAST
Search by part number or model number. You can also search by appliance type, brand, or even the type of part.



 Moderated by: RegUS_PatOff, hvacdrd, applianceman18007260692 Tell a friend about this page... all your other friends are doing it!
New Topic Reply Printer Friendly
Furnace: low voltage at the gas valve? RUUD UGDE-06ELAES  Rate Topic 
AuthorPost
 Posted: Wed Mar 11th, 2009 06:07 pm
  PM Quote Reply
1st Post
dshanks
Senior Apprentice Appliantologist
 

Joined: Thu Dec 6th, 2007
Location:  
Posts: 7
Flavorite Brew: Cold
Skype: 
Status: 
Offline
I have a RUUD UGDE-06ELAES "Deluxe High Efficiency" furnace that suddenly stopped working while we slept last night.  It was installed in 1991 or 1992.

In my attempt to diagnose the problem, I've discovered that the gas valve gets 17-19VAC instead of 24VAC when the relay closes at the end of the ignitor cycle. 

Here's what I'm seeing:
  1. Set thermostat high enough to call for heat
  2. Blower goes on
  3. 30 seconds or so after blower on, ignitor lights up
  4. 20 seconds or so after ignitor lights, I hear a click and see approximately 17-19 VAC across the gas valve relay.
  5. 5 seconds or so after I see voltage at the gas valve, the ignitor goes off and the voltage at the gas valve drops to zero.
I also measured the voltage across Valve and Common on the Robertshaw Model HS780 34PL-398A control board.  Surprisingly, the control board is putting out 17-19VAC.  Not 24VAC.  Not 0VAC. So my question is, what does this mean?  What could cause the control board to put out low voltage?

I should probably also mention that this furnace was repaired three or four years ago.  At that time, a repairman replaced the ignitor and I think he may have replaced the Robertshaw control board too.  But I'm not sure the control board was replaced.  It just looks "newer" than the rest of the parts in the furnace.

I checked the output voltage at the transformer, and it's 26.9 VAC.  The input voltage to the Robertshaw control board, measured across TH & COM is also 26.9VAC.  But the output to the gas valve is 17-19VAC.  This suggests to me that there's something wrong with one of the circuit boards.

How do I tell which of the circuit boards needs to be replaced?

Edit - Conclusion: I decided to gamble that replacing the Robertshaw board would solve the problem.  After all, 26.9V in and 17-19V out probably means something's wrong, right? 

Anyway, I replaced the board and the furnace works again.  I couldn't have done it without the information I found in this forum.  Thanks, Samurai Appliance Repair Man!

Last edited on Wed Mar 11th, 2009 10:54 pm by dshanks

Back To Top PM Quote Reply  

 Posted: Sat Mar 14th, 2009 08:17 pm
  PM Quote Reply
2nd Post
applianceman18007260692
Sublime Master of Appliantology


Joined: Thu Nov 17th, 2005
Location: Mobile, Alabama USA
Posts: 978
Flavorite Brew: Keystone Light
Skype: 
Status: 
Offline
Check all your connections for corrosion and make sure they are tight. Clean the sensor and retry



____________________
"May the hinges of our friendship never grow rusty"
Old Irish Saying

Back To Top PM Quote Reply

Current time is 04:08 am  
ApplianceGuru.com: The Samurai Appliance Repair Forums > Do-It-Yourself Appliance Repair Help > Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning (HVAC) > Furnace: low voltage at the gas valve? RUUD UGDE-06ELAES Top



FAQs | Parts | Service | Store | Newsletter | Sitemap | Beer | Fixitnow.com

Your Sometimes-Lucid Host:
ApplianceGuru.com:  The Samurai Appliance Repair Forums Home
"If I can't help you fix your appliance and make you 100% satisfied, I will come to your home and slice open my belly, spilling my steaming entrails onto your floor." Skype Me™!

Appliance theme by Di @ Data 1 Systems
UltraBB 1.17 Copyright © 2007-2008 Data 1 Systems
Page processed in 0.1663 seconds (7% database + 93% PHP). 26 queries executed.