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Gas fireplace log valve

mharmon

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Oct 10, 2012
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205
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Salt Lake City
I have a gas log conversion in my fireplace. I have been smelling gas near the fireplace when not in use. I assume the issue is with the valve. Do these valves seal using a lubricant? Or can one of you point me in the right direction for a replacement valve? 96588F27-8CF1-43C8-B5D6-A11BF7916175.jpeg
 
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gmcgeo

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Mar 11, 2019
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there was no need to take everything apart. who knows where the leak is. could have been at the threads.

need to soap it out while it has gas pressure
 

Walkers

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May 17, 2021
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3,912
Location
Cave Creek Az
Yes, that tapered core valve uses valve grease to seal. A high temp wheel bearing grease will work fine. It takes very little grease after the parts are cleaned.

It would be far better to install an actual fireplace valve outside of the firebox than what you currently use.
 
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mharmon

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Oct 10, 2012
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Salt Lake City
Thank you Walkers. I’ve been looking at other valve options. The hard part is reworking things in this historic home.
 

428PI

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Jul 14, 2018
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Peabody, KS
My ventless logs seems to leak raw propane at certain settings and enough that it has lit that gas on fire for a split second. Can't find any leaks with bubbles.
 
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gmcgeo

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My ventless logs seems to leak raw propane at certain settings and enough that it has lit that gas on fire for a split second. Can't find any leaks with bubbles.
That sounds dangerous, stop using them. and at certain settings?? sounds like more of a ghosting, and oxygen/fuel issue?
 

428PI

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Peabody, KS
That sounds dangerous, stop using them. and at certain settings?? sounds like more of a ghosting, and oxygen/fuel issue?
I only notice it when the temp knob is in certain positions and only once in awhile. It certainly isn't worn out or anything (less than 10 years old). I wonder if sealing with grease would fix the problem (I know it's some sort of magnetic switch that controls the flame). I haven't fired it up yet this year. Haven't lit the pilot. My wife doesn't really like the non vented gas idea because of smell (not the raw fuel but just a non vented type smell) (I can tell too when it's in use). We do vent the fireplace slightly when using it though but there goes the efficiency.
 

HoosierBuddy

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May 9, 2006
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Southern Indiana
I only notice it when the temp knob is in certain positions and only once in awhile. It certainly isn't worn out or anything (less than 10 years old). I wonder if sealing with grease would fix the problem (I know it's some sort of magnetic switch that controls the flame). I haven't fired it up yet this year. Haven't lit the pilot. My wife doesn't really like the non vented gas idea because of smell (not the raw fuel but just a non vented type smell) (I can tell too when it's in use). We do vent the fireplace slightly when using it though but there goes the efficiency.

You're saying you don't smell any leak EXCEPT when the logs are actually burning?

That doesn't sound like a gas leak at the valve. With that, you'd expect to smell gas all the time.

It sounds more like your logs aren't burning right. That can be caused by dust, pet hair, cobwebs, etc clogging up the burner. It's recommended, about once a year, you shut off the gas, carefully remove the logs, vacuum everything down with a soft-brush attachment on your household vacuum cleaner (logs you have out and the burner assembly), carefully reassemble your logs in the fireplace (THEY ONLY GO IN ONE WAY...PAY ATTENTION).

This should get the burner working properly. It will also cut down on that smell your wife complains about.
 

428PI

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Peabody, KS
It's clean and burns clean. If it's leaking it has something to do with the control valve. Maybe take it apart and see what seals up the control valve.
 

gmcgeo

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Mar 11, 2019
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3,701
Really stuck on that control valve, The control valve is not the problem
 
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