Why is the blower not coming on automatically?After the ignition and before the blower starts, the GFI at the wall plug trips.
If I manually change the exhaust voltage it will cause the blower to start?
Anyone else had this.
If the pot is lit, the smoke will force its way out of the stove.
Are you saying the exhaust blower is not coming on or the room blower. The exhaust blower should come on as soon as you hit start up.
Tripping the GFI is not the same as tripping the breaker. The GFI trips because there is a ground fault. From your description, it sounds like the problem is in the room blower or its wiring, more likely the wiring. Check the wiring carefully for missing insulation or a pinched wire, especially if you have been working on the stove. You could also disconnect the motor to see if the GFI trips.
Good call I missed that it was a gfi. "From here" it does look like a room blower motor-wire problem in some fashion. Could possibly be a failing GFI also. Don't know this stove I am assuming it has an ac motor and not an ecm motor. GFI's don't like ecm motors.
My guess is that the room blower is tripping the breaker. Does the motor spin freely? Is there a test mode or can you just run the room fan? Take amp draw readings from the room blower when it tries to start.
Tripping the GFI is not the same as tripping the breaker. The GFI trips because there is a ground fault. From your description, it sounds like the problem is in the room blower or its wiring, more likely the wiring. Check the wiring carefully for missing insulation or a pinched wire, especially if you have been working on the stove. You could also disconnect the motor to see if the GFI trips.
It runs fine in test mode
Is there a reason for the GFI? Is it in a basement or something? Is it a dedicated circuit? Have you tried it in a regular outlet? It is quite common for a GFI to fail and or wear over time. I could also imagine that the GFI could be working fine and is detecting a potential future motor-ignitor problem before it fails but I would see it as more of a nuisance personally.
Is there a reason for the GFI? Is it in a basement or something? Is it a dedicated circuit? Have you tried it in a regular outlet? It is quite common for a GFI to fail and or wear over time. I could also imagine that the GFI could be working fine and is detecting a potential future motor-ignitor problem before it fails but I would see it as more of a nuisance personally. A pellet stove is one of the last things I would plug into a GFI personally. Just sayin
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