Date: Wed, 31 Aug 2011 12:31:23 -0700
Reply-To: Alistair Bell <albell@SHAW.CA>
Sender: Vanagon Mailing List <vanagon@gerry.vanagon.com>
From: Alistair Bell <albell@SHAW.CA>
Subject: Re: Refrigerator lighting
In-Reply-To: <CAB2Rwfiiw1=Wf+0HG+jpedcWVzkKL9fzgp3qz-Aju4r1LwBF9A@mail.gmail.com>
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I have had, in the past, similar prolems. But on recent trip where temps ranged the mid 30's during day and 2 C at night (yes, cold but very dry mornings) and up to 5,000 ft alt. the fridge worked like a champ, staying lit and working very well in those conditions.
I can't explain why it is working so well now.. I had cleaned every part of the system a few times over the years, the last time was last summer.
alistair
On 2011-08-31, at 12:14 PM, neil n wrote:
> A similar thing would happen to me. I'd arrive to camp, fridge
> running. The flame would go out at night. Theory: cooler ambient
> temps, thermostat remains in same position, flame goes to smaller
> mode, not enough air coming in, flame goes out. Restarting in the
> morning was a huge pain involving copious amounts of pumping air pump
> to keep flame alive.
>
> I think the bigger reason for hard start in morning was that the air
> in, exhaust out cycle was harder to initiate. Normally I fire up my
> fridge on AC at home. This helps start the rise of hotter air in
> exhaust flue. Lighting fridge on LP then becomes easier. As I drive,
> I'm on DC. This accomplishes the same thing AFAIK so when in arriving
> in camp, fridge lights no problem.
>
> There is information on the burner jet orifice. IIRC there's one
> designed for high altitude use. It has a different size orifice.
>
> Neil.
>
> On Wed, Aug 31, 2011 at 11:57 AM, Steven Johnson <sjohnso2000@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Well, at a campout in the mid to late 90's we were near Mammoth Lakes, CA at
>> altitude of about 7K - 8K feet and I lit up the fridge as I
>> normally do and came back later to find the flame had gone out. Long story
>> short, I was able to get it re-lit with the fuel dial all the way
>> down (counter-clockwise). I left it there and slowly turned it up over
>> time. My theory was that with the thinner air it needed less fuel
>> and the burner needed to warm up. I have to assume that the intake and
>> exhaust for your burn mixture are a clear. (okay so I didn't
>> read your whole request)...
>>
>> Steven
>> 91 Westy
>>
>>
>
> --
> Neil n
>
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