TerribleTim68
Well-known member
Hey gang,
I'll be digging through the water heater troubleshooting posts and links to try and find something that will help me. But I figured I'd throw this out there for the collective knowledge, maybe someone has some advice here.
We took the unit out in October for a weekend getaway at our usual spot. Water heater worked fine, I even took a relaxing warm shower (as did the wife after me). Took the unit home, winterized it by pulling the anode rod out of the water heater and draining the entire water system using the low point drain valve at the UDS. We felt that the anode rod could use replaced since we bought this unit used and had no actual idea when it had last been replaced. It didn't look horrible, but cheap insurance is cheap insurance, so I went down to our local Camping World and got a new one, placed it in the unit to remind me to put it in next time we went out.
We took the unit to our usual spot for the New Year's weekend (I got 4 days off there, so yay me). I put the new anode rod in it and connected the water system to our hookup. for whatever reason, the water heater would simply not do anything at all. When I turned on the switch inside the heater did not try to light the gas burner. There was no audible "click, click, click" as it tried to light, no nothing at all. I tried giving it some time to maybe get gas up to the heater, but shouldn't the igniter attempt to light regardless of gas being present?
Regarding the small switch at the heater (the one outside behind the cover that switches it to electric mode), because I know this is going to come up. It has been in the "OFF" position since we purchased the unit, I never even knew it was there until trying to research why the igniter wasn't doing anything and why I had no hot water. I tried to flip it to "ON" but found that it is froze up solid. No amount of pressure will flip it to the "ON" position. At least no amount that I can muster anyways. Can you guys think of anything that would cause that switch to freeze up like that?
EDIT: Okay, after digging into the troubleshooting guide it mentions a cotter pin for the electrical mode switch. Possible this is why I could not flip the switch to the "ON" position. However, I do not see in the pics of this switch where a cotter pin would be located or how something that tiny could be in there. Does someone have a pic of the cotter pin in your switch?
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated. in the mean time I'll be off pouring through manuals, troubleshooting guides and various online help outlets in my quest to figure out WTF happened to my hot water source. Cold showers are not that fun in winter.
- - - Updated - - -
Oh yeah, since this will come up too -
I checked the breaker panel, nothing was tripped. I tripped the water heater breaker and turned it back on just to be sure. No change. I did not see a water heater fuse in the fuse panel.
I'll be digging through the water heater troubleshooting posts and links to try and find something that will help me. But I figured I'd throw this out there for the collective knowledge, maybe someone has some advice here.
We took the unit out in October for a weekend getaway at our usual spot. Water heater worked fine, I even took a relaxing warm shower (as did the wife after me). Took the unit home, winterized it by pulling the anode rod out of the water heater and draining the entire water system using the low point drain valve at the UDS. We felt that the anode rod could use replaced since we bought this unit used and had no actual idea when it had last been replaced. It didn't look horrible, but cheap insurance is cheap insurance, so I went down to our local Camping World and got a new one, placed it in the unit to remind me to put it in next time we went out.
We took the unit to our usual spot for the New Year's weekend (I got 4 days off there, so yay me). I put the new anode rod in it and connected the water system to our hookup. for whatever reason, the water heater would simply not do anything at all. When I turned on the switch inside the heater did not try to light the gas burner. There was no audible "click, click, click" as it tried to light, no nothing at all. I tried giving it some time to maybe get gas up to the heater, but shouldn't the igniter attempt to light regardless of gas being present?
Regarding the small switch at the heater (the one outside behind the cover that switches it to electric mode), because I know this is going to come up. It has been in the "OFF" position since we purchased the unit, I never even knew it was there until trying to research why the igniter wasn't doing anything and why I had no hot water. I tried to flip it to "ON" but found that it is froze up solid. No amount of pressure will flip it to the "ON" position. At least no amount that I can muster anyways. Can you guys think of anything that would cause that switch to freeze up like that?
EDIT: Okay, after digging into the troubleshooting guide it mentions a cotter pin for the electrical mode switch. Possible this is why I could not flip the switch to the "ON" position. However, I do not see in the pics of this switch where a cotter pin would be located or how something that tiny could be in there. Does someone have a pic of the cotter pin in your switch?
Any help on this would be greatly appreciated. in the mean time I'll be off pouring through manuals, troubleshooting guides and various online help outlets in my quest to figure out WTF happened to my hot water source. Cold showers are not that fun in winter.
- - - Updated - - -
Oh yeah, since this will come up too -
I checked the breaker panel, nothing was tripped. I tripped the water heater breaker and turned it back on just to be sure. No change. I did not see a water heater fuse in the fuse panel.