Cooker thermocouples

Two dissimilar metals create a tiny electrical current when heated. This current is used by an electro magnet in the valve to stay open and let the gas flow. Flame goes out, the current stops and so the spring loaded valve shuts.
 
Two dissimilar metals create a tiny electrical current when heated. This current is used by an electro magnet in the valve to stay open and let the gas flow. Flame goes out, the current stops and so the spring loaded valve shuts.

Are you sure about that? The current produced by a thermocouple is tiny and the hob has no power supply - I would be amazed if the thermocouple was able to generate enough power to operate an electro-mechanical valve. I had always assumed that it was a purely mechanical thing - the bulb of the sensor gets hot and a gas or liquid expands which, in turn, operates a valve.

I have to say that the thermocouples on the hob in our new boat are very unreliable. It worked fine when it was delivered, but over a period of a few months they took longer and longer to get up to working temperature and would not hold the flame on with the gas turned low. We got the engineer in as a warranty repair and he spent an hour adjusting them all, but a couple of months later they are going the same way again. Not a cheap hob either - some Italian thing costing quite a few hundred quid!
 
Are you sure about that? The current produced by a thermocouple is tiny and the hob has no power supply - I would be amazed if the thermocouple was able to generate enough power to operate an electro-mechanical valve. I had always assumed that it was a purely mechanical thing - the bulb of the sensor gets hot and a gas or liquid expands which, in turn, operates a valve.

It is right. Doesn't need a power supply, any more than a fridge magnet.

Thermo-electric-flame-supervision-device.jpg
 
Well, I stand corrected - and very surprised! I would not have believed that a small thermocouple like that could generate enough power to operate a solenoid. I'm not sure that the fridge magnet is relevant - that is a permanent magnet.
 
Well, I stand corrected - and very surprised! I would not have believed that a small thermocouple like that could generate enough power to operate a solenoid. I'm not sure that the fridge magnet is relevant - that is a permanent magnet.

Fridge magnet is relevant I think, replace the electromagnetic part with a normal magnet then the valve will stay open, same as using a thermocouple to provide a voltage to the electromagnetic part. No power required, it creates a force to keep the valve open, not to operate a solenoid - the power required to do that is you when you push the knob in.
 
Fridge magnet is relevant I think, replace the electromagnetic part with a normal magnet then the valve will stay open, same as using a thermocouple to provide a voltage to the electromagnetic part. No power required, it creates a force to keep the valve open, not to operate a solenoid - the power required to do that is you when you push the knob in.

:confused: But then there would be no flame failure detection. Why would you do that?
 
Well, I stand corrected - and very surprised! I would not have believed that a small thermocouple like that could generate enough power to operate a solenoid. I'm not sure that the fridge magnet is relevant - that is a permanent magnet.

It's just a very small holding current, and a bit of googling suggest that it's only up to very small valves, like pilot lights. Full sized burned valves have to use thermopiles or different technology altogether.
 
It's just a very small holding current, and a bit of googling suggest that it's only up to very small valves, like pilot lights. Full sized burned valves have to use thermopiles or different technology altogether.

I thought that we were talking about "full sized burned (sic) valves" - I'm referring to the flame failure device that keeps the burner on our gas hob working.
 
Had some problems with the home gas hob (prior to getting on the gas grid). It's a fancy smeg, expensive italian one.
Turned out that the quality of gas fed to it was important as else the tiny tip would blacken and carbon up and then the thermocouple wouldn't work.
Change of gas cylinder is an cheap test to confirm or dismiss that theory. Worked on mine.

cheers

V.
 
So how does that square with JumbleDuck's suggestion that "Full sized burned valves have to use thermopiles or different technology altogether."

Thermopiles are just a stack of thermocouples. Usually in series to generate more voltage but they can also be in parallel.
 
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