Hi Ken,
It is nice to hear of your experience with my description of the repair process. You are the first to provide feedback of their results even though there have been about 8,000 views of the thread since my original posting.
I figure: 1) some never got as far as my post at the end of the thread, 2) decided to put up with the noise, 3) installed a different heater, 4) were waiting for others such as yourself to do it and see if it is worth the effort, 4) had someone else do the work after seeing the steps and getting dizzy.
As you found out for yourself, it in not a major project as those furnaces were made so they can actually be worked on without having
electrical and mechanical engineering degrees.
Just yesterday I returned from a 4-day trip to southwest Colorado area from Denver to Lake City, Pagosa Springs, Durango, Silverton, Ouray, etc. and back home The
fall colors of the aspens in the high country were spectacular.
I found out something real interesting on the trip. I don’t know if it applies in others areas or states, but some of the national park campgrounds are still open and are free. No camp hosts, water or trash available, but free. These are regular campsites, not just dispersed camping. One of them is the Silver Thread campground about 20 miles north of Creed. I checked with the ranger station in Creed and sure enough, in fact it stays open year-round, closed only if due to heavy snow. Another campsite at Cimmaron, CO is still open and even has a camp host..
Ergo, it would seem that some of the best camping is after the cg’s officially close the weekend after Labor Day, and then check to see which ones are still open to catch the
fall colors. Very little traffic during the week and you practically have the campground and roads to yourself. Be sure you have a good
furnace in your camper when in the high country around 9,000 feet that time of year.