With the exception of pilot type water heaters and some smaller LP/Electric refrigerators, modern LP appliances in RVs are controlled by electronics, meaning the gas valve is opened, the flame is ignited, and the flame is “proved” (flame safety- making certain the burner is burning). These systems are used for a number of reasons:
- No “standing” pilot flame to waste energy.
- Set and forget operation- for refrigerators, automatic energy selection (LP or 120 volt).
- Operation more like the home appliances
There are 2 methods of “proving” the flame. A purely electronic method, and what I call a “hybrid” method- both are in common use today, and both have specific troubleshooting steps to diagnose any failures.
What I call “hybrid” systems are those that will use an electronic ignitor to light the flame, but will use a thermocouple to detect the flame. This system is most commonly used in newer model Dometic refrigerators.
Early Dometic models had grounding issues- the gas valve got its ground through the circuit board, but the thermocouple was hooked to the ground strip. When the ground connections got a bit of corrosion, the ground reference point the circuit board saw would “float” above zero, and the board would not see the small millivolt signal from the thermocouple. Almost all of these have had wiring harnesses retrofitted to take care of this problem.
In fully electronic ignition systems, no thermocouple is used. This type of system is used in furnaces, water heaters and Norcold refrigerators . Because this type has no thermocouple, some other method of detecting whether the flame is burning is needed. Enter the principals of flame rectification and flame ionization- which basically use the fact that a flame can conduct electrical current to electronically sense whether a flame is burning. (for a bit of somewhat “dry” reading, you can look at some patents- a 1944 Flame detection patent, a 1971 patent, and a 1979 digital flame detection patent (looking up patents from patent numbers can be interesting for equipment geeks like me!). The current which is conducted through the flame is between 8 and 15 microamps.
O.K., but what does this all mean? In its basic form, this type of DSI (Direct Spark Ignition, a.k.a electronic ignition) system has a few basic requirements. The ignition control module (board) needs the proper supply voltage, the flame needs to be the proper size, the electrode (which is just a wire- nothing more) has to be in the flame, and in order for the flame detection to work properly, the return path for the small current needs to be good- which is basically the ground path and connections.
Places to look are the spark gap itself- should be 3/16″, and fully in the flame, the connection of the burner tube (in the newest models this area has been improved by a new mounting procedure), and the connector itself- probably the most common point of failure, and the easiest to remedy- simply remove the edge connector and gently clean the printed circuit conductors- the usual recommendation is to use a pencil eraser, but you must do it gently, so as to not remove the plating from the board.
Next week I’ll talk about the use of DSI circuits in the RV furnace, and the safety systems they use.
Questions or comments, see this thread in the RV.Net forums.