- Thread starter
- #11
linguini
Songster
Does it have a way to open it to get at the internal components? If so, use an electric meter set on ohms or just a battery powered electrical test light. You need to check each wire of the power cord to see if the wire is unbroken from the male prong to where that wire connects to the electronic or resistance heater element. Unplug it of course, check one side then the other. Once you rule out the power cord being bad use an electrical meter set on ohms to check the resistance in the heating coil. Again you are checking for continuity, electric is going in and out and the amount of resistance which is what produces the heat as it chokes down the flow of electrons.
If you don't understand any of this, toss the heater in the trash and buy a new one before you electrocute yourself.
Thanks for the suggestion. It's not clear if the unit is functioning properly - we'll know the next two days when temperature drops down to below 20. If the spouts froze, we'll try to to see if we can open the base and do some testing. We do have a multimeter handy. If all fails, we'll get a K&H submersible unit suggested by @jreardon1918 !