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![]() "Walt Bilofsky" wrote in message ... Has anyone else has run into this problem with their boat's hot water heater? The problem is that once the water is heated up by the hot engine coolant, the 110 v. electric water heating stops working, because a thermal overload breaker on the heater trips. The heater runs on engine heat or 110 v. The thermostat on the heater includes a thermal breaker that trips when the tank goes above 170 degrees. The normal operating temperature of my Volvo diesel engines is 175-180 degrees. So eventually the engine coolant heats the water above 170, and the thermal breaker pops. Now the heater won't work on 110 v. until the thermal breaker is reset. (This requires disassembling the panel on the heater to get to the breaker.) Does anyone else run into this problem? Any ideas for a workaround? The heater is a SureStor SS-12M made by Advanced Heat Transfer. Wow. 170 is much too hot. 120 would be better and safer. Probably the easiest solution would be to add a bypass line with a valve to control the flow thru the water heater. -- Posted via a free Usenet account from http://www.teranews.com |
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