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Cooking Equipment (rec.food.equipment) Discussion of food-related equipment. Includes items used in food preparation and storage, including major and minor appliances, gadgets and utensils, infrastructure, and food- and recipe-related software. |
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We have an SGM365 5 burner Dacor cooktop about a year and a half old
with one ignitor that became somewhat erratic and eventually just stopped sparking at all. I expected a flaky connection so I removed and cleaned it up, and removed, tightened the spade connector slightly with pliers and reassembled it. That seemed to help but now the problem has returned. The other burners typically all fire up within two or three sparks, but occasionally one of the others will sit there clacking for maybe 10-12 sparks before it finally lights. If you watch that particular ignitor, it's clear that it may not be sparking on every single 'clack', maybe missing 1 or 2 in a row and then sparking again. Anyway, I swapped the problem burner ring with one that seemed to have no problem to rule things out. The problem remained at the location rather than following the burner, so that seemed to indicate a wire or other downline problem. Yesterday I raised the top and removed/tightened/reinserted the subject wire to the spark generator box. This doesn't seem to have helped much either; with all the ignitors cleaned up, the problem burner still isn't nearly 100% reliable as far as firing right off every time. It is lighting now however, whereas it wasn't before this last try. Also, almost accidentally, I noticed that if I lay a screwdriver blade alongside the porcelain, parallel to the cooktop surface and running in to the actual burner, then an ignitor that was missing sparks begins sparking much more reliably, as if the capacitance of the screwdriver blade is somehow remedying whatever problem exists. In rec.food.cooking, I did find a mention of a Viking which was firing for no apparent reason; one poster suggested that if everything was clean, then the black box was probably to blame. We had an Amana cooktop prior to the Dacor and I must say, the system it used was MUCH more reliable; as I recall, it lit the burners with ONE spark EVERY time. The Dacor now typically takes at least two or three on most burners, and again, sometimes many more. On the large one, sometimes I'll even blow a puff of air down into the burner area thinking that somehow the gas just isn't where it needs to be to light up, which seems rather impossible, but blowing seems to help as well. Finally, in some tests just now, I found that on more than one burner, the sparks seem to weaken if the volume of gas is increased; in other words, if you crank the know just barely on, it starts up the spark generator but without gas flow, so everything is clacking away, and then as you increase rotation the gas begins to flow; it was clear that the spark on the big burner at least became more intermittent and visibly weaker as the gas flow increased. Does all this sound simply like not enough voltage out of the blue box? I certainly wouldn't be overjoyed to have to lay out $400 on a $1000 appliance that's under two years old. The box is made by Tytronics, an Aussie firm, but I can't locate anyone selling them on the web nor any info other than the mfg. site. Any ideas out there? a disappointed Dacor owner |
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