Welcome to the forum. Although you can post in any forum, the USA forum is here in case of local regs or laws

Install the app
How to install the app on iOS

Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.

Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.

D

davetah

Hi,

I've been called out to a Heatline Compact S24, which was not giving hot water or heating, and error code 90/ flame or gas failure fault light flashing. Cleaned & serviced it, checked connections etc & boiler fired up. Both heating & hot water working OK independantly of each other for a time. When there is no demand on the boiler for a while:thinking:, the whole fault re-appears, and you need to go right back through the whole thing again, until it suddenly decides to respond . When system NOT working properly, if only asking for hot water, boiler going through ignition procedure but not firing up, although error code 90/ flame or gas failure fault light not appearing (only showing when heating demanded). Any ideas?
 
Sounds like a board or a connection of some sort. If it's not firing up could still be a flame sense electrode fault. My bet is a PCB but couldn't really be sure. You getting gas through when it fails?
 
I've checked the connections, and looked on back of the board for 'dry' joints, or signs of tracking/arcing burning, but everything looks OK. Am not sure if lack of gas is due to the 'fault signal', which cuts off the supply PDQ. Will monitor in the first seconds. Heatline not being uber helpful, just suggest replacing a raft of components on the 'might be' basis, most of which are fixable, even when faulty. No wonder customers think we want to fleece them. Don't understand why the fault comes & goes when connections & board seem good?
 
Last edited by a moderator:
Hi Davetah,
Check out the burner pressure during ignition. If to low it may light sometimes but others... you can adjust the ignition and burner presures via the potentiometers on the PCB.
 
i would give a wide berth ,these type of jobs are nightmares,intermittant problems,are a pain to trace ,expensive to repair,
i would try and talk them into a new boiler,other than that i would register them on your "friends and family call plan if your with bt!"
because they wont be off the phone to you.
 
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person
This kind of fault is a pain but one component will be the culprit. Get the MIs and check the firing sequence. Watch what happens, look at the gauge check for pump kick see if it fails after initial kick, check voltage on APS is it clicking on then off check and clean air intakes and aps hoses with soapy water any of these things can make a boiler fail like that. Then start looking at parts start with the cheapest but tell the client it could cost £300 but the manufacturer can fix for a fixed price usually about £180 up to 3 parts. If you get the basics at least you won't look stupid. Always check the burner pressures, i was ages at an alpha once and was convinced it was the gas valve. Before I gave the client the good news I checked the inlet pressure standing was 22mb as soon as the valve opened it dropped to two. Problem was the junk in the cupboard had fallen on the ECV and nearly turned it off. So check the basics everytime. Worth checking pressure switch isn't blocked as well.
 
Last edited by a moderator:
  • Like
Reactions: 1 person

Official Sponsors of Plumbers Talk

Similar plumbing topics

We recommend City Plumbing Supplies, BES, and Plumbing Superstore for all plumbing supplies.