Piperflyer
Well-known member
I don't care how long the shower lasts. I want to figure out why my hot water is luke warm on the 120v side.
I don't care how long the shower lasts. I want to figure out why my hot water is luke warm on the 120v side.
We used the water heater on 120v only, LP only, and 120v with LP. We always ran out of hot water. Why?
Here is the model.
View attachment 50378
Cary,Hi All - a little distressed here. As I mentioned earlier I received the thermostat for the Suburban Water Heater. I took pictures for the before and after so I could post the pics. I labeled the pics so you can see my dilemma. The original pic has the reset button at the top (grey round plastic). Red wires on the left. The newly ordered thermostat installed has the reset button (grey round plastic) on the bottom. Not correct. So I looked at the water heater manual on this site and it doesn't speak of thermostat (I did a word search). So, can I mount it upside down and install so the reset button is in the correct position? The red wiring will switch as well. not much room on the right side of the casing but I'll make it work.
Was just wondering if someone has run up against this before and what was done. Bottom line is that the reset button must be located to the top.
Thanks in advance.
C&J
Cary,
There are a couple of problems.
First, refer to the Water Heater Troubleshooting Guide, page 7. The 120V Thermostat/ECO is normally on the left with black wires. In your pictures, with reference to red wires, it appears you've changed out the 12V thermostat and replaced it with the 120V thermostat. If so, you may still have a non-functional electric operation. I'm not sure whether you'd also now have a non-functional 12V/propane operation because I'm not sure there's any difference in the electrical properties of the two sensors. The difference could just be the mirror image of power connections.
Second, if you note the wiring diagram on page 7, you'll see that power flows through the thermostat and ECO sensors. So one wire is an IN and the other is an OUT. If both sensors are closed, power will flow. I don't know of any reason the circuit would be uni-directional. So you would just orient the reset button toward the top.
I'd suggest you measure the voltage coming into each sensor to make sure you're replacing the 120V thermostat. It's certainly possible that Suburban changed something since our Troubleshooting Guide was written. But if not, you'll want to replace the right part.
You're 120 V thermostat is on the black wires on the left side this controls your electric heat. The 12 V Thermostat right side is for your electric propane gas part of your water heater. They both have two different part numbers and it appears you ordered the wrong one
110V part number is here: http://www.ebay.com/itm/like/252092709640?lpid=82&chn=ps&ul_noapp=true
12V part number is here: http://www.americanrvcompany.com/Su...er-Camper-RV?gclid=CJbnvs3zg9MCFVKFfgod9-gGSg
Amazon.com has all the parts you need for your suburban water heater if you need more parts...
30 - 45 minutes you should feel a difference in the water temp. If you want it to warm up real fast turn both electric and propane on for awhile.