BrotherBart said:Good grief. Next thing you know when you call customer service the first thing they will be asking will be if you rebooted your stove!
Maybe that barrel stove kit ain't so bad after all. :coolsmirk:
:lol: I just spewed my coffee all over the computer screen reading this comment. :lol:
Thanks for the gut wrenching laugh. I am still grinning over it.
Now off to refill the coffee cup,
Jim

unputs into the perimeter of the board, each with it's own style molex, so you cannot possibly hook the wrong thing up to the wrong component...however that is 15 molex's to fail. In particular, the two thermocouples coming in to the board are solid core wires in to a very fragile two pin connector. If the those thermocouple wires are moved the wrong way...you will break their molexes off the board. While those connectors are about .14 cents each. you will be lucky if the solder holds to the pins. The board is $700, thermocouples are $120...when the igniter finally blows...and it will, the fuse for the igniter is in the board and you will have to remove all 15 connections and put them back on to change the fuse and during that process, if you are not saavy to this, you will either break the connectors or damage the board. I have done it twice now. Thats a $1000 hit to my wallet over stupid $55 part that never should have gone in 4 months anyway. To top it off, there are at least 12 sensors on the stove that often fail and unless you have the computer to diagnose, you will be at a loss.