Potterton Netaheat Electronic 16-22

Joined
3 Sep 2003
Messages
74
Reaction score
0
Country
United Kingdom
Hi again.
I have a Netaheat 16-22 which has just began playing up.
When you start it up, the fan comes on, then the pilot lights after a few seconds, then the main burner lights. It stays lit only for about 7-10 seconds before the main burner slowly "dies", and then the whole sequence starts again.
I have read that these can be quite dangerous boilers and am aware that I should not remove the main case, but would appreciate any help.

Paul
 
Sponsored Links
See if the aps is dropping out. Connections are on the pcb outside the airtight box.
 
Thanks Chris. I pulled one of the clear tubes / pipes that connect to the air pressure switch, turned the boiler on, but only the fan came on, no pilot light or anything else. I re-connected the pipe to the aps while the fan was still running, and pilot lit straight away, and then main burner and then it all died again, as before.
Is there any other test to do an the aps or does this mean it is working ok?

Paul
 
No that doesn't test anything.
Obviously the aps was seeing the fan come on in the first place otherwise the burner wouldn't have lit. Question is whether it goes off again - needs someone competent with the circuit and a meter to see.

If not that then I would check pilot and flame detection. Not a nice job. Bits of asbestos and rusty metal make bids for freedom. Have to use tecky kit to test the seals to stop customer getting CO poisoned before he pays the bill.
Don't you go taking the case off - corgis with experience only.
 
Sponsored Links
Hi Chris.
I had the pcb and the pilot electrode changed about a year ago with a different fault so hopefully it is not those.
I am pretty confident on the electrical side so if you could tell me what I am looking for with regard to testing the aps I would appreciate it.

Paul
 
Well thinking about the problem being with the fan aps blocked flue or something along those lines, I thought I would visably check the flue, as it has been very windy here lately. When I looked outside I could see that some light aluminium ladders that have been chained up to a soil pipe had shifted with the wind and was partially in front of the flue exit.
I moved the ladders and tried the boiler and it now seems to be working fine.

Just shows that you should always check the simple / obvious things first.

Thanks for your help Chris.

Paul
 
Thats why I always train people to check the flue first BEFORE they start to try fault finding!

Isn't that a clever boiler that can protect itself against an idiot with a ladder?

Tony
 
Agile said:
Thats why I always train people to check the flue first BEFORE they start to try fault finding!

Isn't that a clever boiler that can protect itself against an idiot with a ladder?

Tony

Agile, I think your comment is a bit stupid. No one on this forum suggested checking the flue first and as for the idiot with the ladder, it has been chained up unused for at least 6 months, so I find you comment provocatave and a complete waste of time.
I only informed the forum of the outcome so as to make other people aware of such a simple problem.

pixey
 
pixey said:
Agile said:
Thats why I always train people to check the flue first BEFORE they start to try fault finding!

Isn't that a clever boiler that can protect itself against an idiot with a ladder?

Tony

Agile, I think your comment is a bit stupid. No one on this forum suggested checking the flue first and as for the idiot with the ladder, it has been chained up unused for at least 6 months, so I find you comment provocatave and a complete waste of time.
I only informed the forum of the outcome so as to make other people aware of such a simple problem.

pixey

Although in fairness Agile's point is spot on, just put across harshly ! :D
 
Thanks for coming back pixey. It hadn't occurred to me in your case, but we see plenty of boilers messing about when ivy decides to get into the flue. Though it's probably only 1% of airflow problems, and they usually fail to light reliably in the first place.
All faults are obvious when you know what they are. I don't remember any other posts where Agile has suggested checking the flue first..... ;)

Oh and if the Netaheat were a slightly clever boiler it wouldn't light with the cover off, which it does.
 

DIYnot Local

Staff member

If you need to find a tradesperson to get your job done, please try our local search below, or if you are doing it yourself you can find suppliers local to you.

Select the supplier or trade you require, enter your location to begin your search.


Are you a trade or supplier? You can create your listing free at DIYnot Local

 
Sponsored Links
Back
Top