driftpin
Well-known member
Our son got us a LP gas grille for the holidays, a GrillSmith 5-burner stainless steel unit. It's sold by Walmart, and he found it by looking on slickdeals. It has some enameled panels, but is well-made, it came in a knock-down box, requiring some assembly. The flavor shields over the burners are heavy-gauge stainless steel.
I haven't used it much, the one time I did, it quickly raised the temperature, and cooked well.
Yesterday, I went to use it, and while it fired right-up, it took a much-longer time to heat, and it never got over 300 degrees F. I finally removed the chicken thighs and stuck them in our Wolf convection oven to finish.
I tried checking to ensure that the tank had gas, that the tank valve was fully-open, and that the burner 'rheostats' were fully-open. Everything checked-out but the flames from the 'log' burners were weak, barely emerging from the burner holes, though they were blue, not yellow. I shut-down the grille, and decided to look at it in the daylight.
Today I got up and using the info from the manual, I disconnected the flexible gas line, because the directions said to do that if the "burner does not get hot enough," to do that to reset the regulator. The explanation is that the "flow control device has been actuated in regulator."
My question: does the gas regulator have to be in a certain position to operate?
I wonder what caused the regulator flow control device to actuate.
Once I disconnected the gas line(hose) and left it off, and reconnected it, and opened the tank valve, when I lit the burners, the grille quickly heated-up to 400 degrees F in several minutes, and functioned as I expect it should. So, allowing the flow control device to reset by disconnecting the gas supply hose seems to have restored the grille function.
I have the regulator positioned with the small cylindrical 'top-hat' upright now, after seeing in the manual that's how it's shown in the schematic. I have no-idea if the regulator position has any effect on the gas flow, or the operation of the 'flow control device.' At least I know how to deal with it if it happens again, by disconnecting the gas supply hose.
I haven't used it much, the one time I did, it quickly raised the temperature, and cooked well.
Yesterday, I went to use it, and while it fired right-up, it took a much-longer time to heat, and it never got over 300 degrees F. I finally removed the chicken thighs and stuck them in our Wolf convection oven to finish.
I tried checking to ensure that the tank had gas, that the tank valve was fully-open, and that the burner 'rheostats' were fully-open. Everything checked-out but the flames from the 'log' burners were weak, barely emerging from the burner holes, though they were blue, not yellow. I shut-down the grille, and decided to look at it in the daylight.
Today I got up and using the info from the manual, I disconnected the flexible gas line, because the directions said to do that if the "burner does not get hot enough," to do that to reset the regulator. The explanation is that the "flow control device has been actuated in regulator."
My question: does the gas regulator have to be in a certain position to operate?
I wonder what caused the regulator flow control device to actuate.
Once I disconnected the gas line(hose) and left it off, and reconnected it, and opened the tank valve, when I lit the burners, the grille quickly heated-up to 400 degrees F in several minutes, and functioned as I expect it should. So, allowing the flow control device to reset by disconnecting the gas supply hose seems to have restored the grille function.
I have the regulator positioned with the small cylindrical 'top-hat' upright now, after seeing in the manual that's how it's shown in the schematic. I have no-idea if the regulator position has any effect on the gas flow, or the operation of the 'flow control device.' At least I know how to deal with it if it happens again, by disconnecting the gas supply hose.
Last edited:
