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October 20, 2005
Biggles goes nuts over an old flame

Ha ha, fooled you. Dr. Biggles has a handy tip for adjusting the burners on old stoves, if you're lucky enough to have one. Wrench yourself over there and have a gander, as usual he's cooking up some good stuff, too.
Posted by The Pragmatic Chef at October 20, 2005 3:24 PM
Filed under:
Kitchen Equipment
Comments
Cool! At least you figured out how to use that trackback thing or whatever it was that you did. It seems to have worked!
Biggles
Posted by: Dr. Biggles at October 20, 2005 3:47 PM
Well, now that you have explained how to adjust height of flame on the burners....can you explain how to replace the saftey valve and adjust it properly for the oven flame intensity?? I have replaced the saftey valve, however, the adjustment to the damper for creating a larger flame is making too much gas fumes and the temp is not coming up to par. Could it be a thermostat issue vs. a saftey valve? or is the thermostat in the saftey valve? Where is the thermostat? Help!!!
Posted by: dalkren1 at November 27, 2006 6:38 AM
Hey Dalkren,
I've never replaced a safety valve before. It should be a standard R/R with some proper tools (and the gas turned OFF).
The valve should come preadjusted at the correct pressure.
Your problem is a bad or badly adjusted thermostat. Since yours is already out of whack, you can try adjusting it yourself. That being said, all the trained technicians I've ever spoken to told me to never do this myself. That a trained specialist is the only one that should futz with it. I say go for it.
Pull off the knob that adjusts the oven temp. In the center you'll notice an adjustment for oven temperature. Only mess with this if your temp is off, not flame adjustment. While looking dead on, there's 2 screws in the upper right and left? See? The one on the right is the oven pilot adjustment. The one on the left is the flame adjust, try moving this one. Always remember or MARK the starting point so you can return it back where you found it.
You may need a new oven thermostat though. They don't last forever, I replaced mine a few years ago. I hope this helps.
Biggles
Posted by: Dr. Biggles at November 27, 2006 10:15 AM