Do you have a question about the DDD500WT151DA and is the answer not in the manual?
Questions and answers
Kitanne Chapman-Clark
February 1, 2025
The appliance is not functioning. Power there. Set to comfort mode. Images appear of 24deg temp and **** but no heat. I have repeatedly tried to remedy as per manual but no luck.
1 comments:
Mr. Anderson
February 10, 2025
Possible issues with the Kingfisher DDD500WT151DA appliance not producing heat despite being set to comfort mode:
1. Power Supply Issue – Ensure the appliance is properly connected to a 220-240V power source and that the circuit breaker is not tripped. 2. Standby Mode – The heater might have gone into standby mode, which stops heating. Check if it needs to be reactivated. 3. Temperature Sensor – The ambient temperature sensor may detect that the room is already warm enough, preventing heating. 4. Thermal Circuit Breaker – The fail-safe thermal circuit breaker might have triggered due to overheating. Allow the unit to cool and reset if necessary. 5. Programmed Settings – The heater has programmable weekly schedules. Confirm that a programmed setting is not preventing heating. 6. Pilot Wire Control – If connected to a pilot wire system, ensure the correct heating command is being sent. 7. Faulty Component – A malfunction in the thermostat or heating element may require professional inspection.
Checking these factors should help identify the cause.
Need help?
Do you have a question about the DDD500WT151DA and is the answer not in the manual?
Questions and answers
The appliance is not functioning. Power there. Set to comfort mode. Images appear of 24deg temp and **** but no heat. I have repeatedly tried to remedy as per manual but no luck.
Possible issues with the Kingfisher DDD500WT151DA appliance not producing heat despite being set to comfort mode:
1. Power Supply Issue – Ensure the appliance is properly connected to a 220-240V power source and that the circuit breaker is not tripped.
2. Standby Mode – The heater might have gone into standby mode, which stops heating. Check if it needs to be reactivated.
3. Temperature Sensor – The ambient temperature sensor may detect that the room is already warm enough, preventing heating.
4. Thermal Circuit Breaker – The fail-safe thermal circuit breaker might have triggered due to overheating. Allow the unit to cool and reset if necessary.
5. Programmed Settings – The heater has programmable weekly schedules. Confirm that a programmed setting is not preventing heating.
6. Pilot Wire Control – If connected to a pilot wire system, ensure the correct heating command is being sent.
7. Faulty Component – A malfunction in the thermostat or heating element may require professional inspection.
Checking these factors should help identify the cause.
This answer is automatically generated