Toyotomi has made changes to all of their line of heaters. All the electrical had changed as of 6/29/15. Main boards, indicator boards, motors, fuel pumps and fuel sumps have all been changed and are not interchangeable with the older units. The note below will give you a good idea of what is happening. I will give a separate run down on each model in the near future. Tom
New Toyostove Direct Vent Wall Heaters 6/29/15
New Toyostove models have new main circuit board, lamp circuit board, fuel sump, fuel pump and burner thermistors.
Changes For All Models
Changes For Each Model
L-30 versus L-300
OM-22/23 versus L-530
L-56 versus L-560 L-73 versus L-730
60-AT no changes have been made.
The L-560 and the L-730 will be around for many years to follow. TUSA does not see the product line changing for several years. Toyotomi Japan just spent quite a bit of money on the L-560 and L-730 manufacturing production line, (new stamp dyes for the sheet metal and a new operation platform).
The efficiency number listed in the installation manual and sales sheet are configured by Toyotomi. With the new rating format for AFUE, there has to be duct loss, Toyotomi stoves have no duct work, therefore they are not rated by AFUE. The number was increased from the old product line because the new stoves have a lower electrical demand. Toyotomi has lowered the combustion pre-purge fan timing and speed, and a more efficient fuel pump with larger incoming fuel screen.
All error codes are the same on all new stoves. The 60AT has the same error codes as before. Here is a list of the error codes.
New Error Codes 6/26/15
What To Look For
E-0 means power is either too high or too low. Are the hertz correct? The only way I know how to check this is to ask the homeowner does the micro-wave keep time? It is the only clock in the home that runs off of hertz.
E-2 is very similar to an EE-2. Look at fuel distribution, tank height, fullness, flame sensor, ignitor, fuel nozzle and fuel pump.
E-6 is pretty much the same as the old EE-6; it is loss of flame 2 times in a row after pre-heat. With the new error code of E-12 it is not a tripped high limit. Usually it is something in the distribution of the fuel, check for kinked or frozen fuel lines, filter fuel being plugged, inlet screen, needle seat in the sump and pump.
E-8 is motor stuck, burnt out, disconnected revolution sensor or corrosion on the bottom of the revolution sensor wire connections, MCB.
E-12 is tripped high limit. The stove is getting too hot. Is it over firing, is the air filter screen or the fan surround dirty? Crud on the cutting edge of the fan blade or is something going on with the circulation blower motor (bearings, windings, power from main circuit board).
E-13 could be a disconnected burner thermistor wire, burner thermistor wire broken, faulty thermistor, MCB, too cold outside or bad flue.
E-22 Hard lock-out! E-2, 3 times in a row, un-plug for 30 minutes, and refer to E-2.
E-23 is primary flame rod is dirty, sooted or disconnected.
New Toyostove Direct Vent Wall Heaters 6/29/15
- L-30 is now L-300.
- OM-23 is now L-530.
- L-56 is now L-560.
- L-73 is now L-730.
- 60-AT is the same.
New Toyostove models have new main circuit board, lamp circuit board, fuel sump, fuel pump and burner thermistors.
Changes For All Models
- New main board for each unit
- New lamp circuit board with better features. The new control has a bigger display that is much brighter and has 30 programing options, pre-programed with 8 set-backs. Easy to use, and see!
- New fuel sump and pump.
- No fire rite safety valve required (be sure to sell our shut off valve). Fuel sump will melt, stopping the fuel flow, because it is now made of Zinc.
- Power saver mode button on all stoves. When turned on, the temperature differential changes from 4 degrees to 10 degree. Room set point to 68 degrees without energy saver will shut off at 72 degrees; with energy saver button pushed on will turn off at 78 degrees.
- Child lock button. When turned on the stove setting cannot be changed, if the power button is pushed during operation the stove will turn off and give an audible chirping noise.
Changes For Each Model
L-30 versus L-300
- Single piece heat chamber and heat exchanger, just like the OM22/23.
- Exhaust stub relocated to the right. New hole will need to be done when replacing the old style stove with the new product.
- Drip tray attached. No leveling legs.
- Smart new modern look.
- New lamp and main circuit boards.
- New fuel pump and sump.
- No fire-rite oil safety valve.
OM-22/23 versus L-530
- New lamp circuit and main circuit board.
- Fuel pump and sump.
- No fire-rite oil safety valve.
L-56 versus L-560 L-73 versus L-730
- Now has a burner thermistor.
- New lamp circuit and main circuit board.
- New fuel pump and sump.
- Ignitor has shorter wiring harness. All ignitors work on all stoves.
- Has a new built-in cleaning schedule. Stove will still go into the cleaning mode at 2AM, but when stove has run for over 2 hours on high the stove will automatically shift to low fire and turn the ignitor on for 5 minutes. The display will say CL5 and count down to zero, and then the stove will shift back into high fire mode. This is to keep the ignitor clean and the burner assembly clean.
60-AT no changes have been made.
The L-560 and the L-730 will be around for many years to follow. TUSA does not see the product line changing for several years. Toyotomi Japan just spent quite a bit of money on the L-560 and L-730 manufacturing production line, (new stamp dyes for the sheet metal and a new operation platform).
The efficiency number listed in the installation manual and sales sheet are configured by Toyotomi. With the new rating format for AFUE, there has to be duct loss, Toyotomi stoves have no duct work, therefore they are not rated by AFUE. The number was increased from the old product line because the new stoves have a lower electrical demand. Toyotomi has lowered the combustion pre-purge fan timing and speed, and a more efficient fuel pump with larger incoming fuel screen.
All error codes are the same on all new stoves. The 60AT has the same error codes as before. Here is a list of the error codes.
New Error Codes 6/26/15
- E-0 is power failure (low voltage or unstable frequency) not power went out. Unit should restart after power outage.
- E-2 is no flame detected.
- E-6 is loss of flame 2 times after pre-heat.
- E-8 is combustion blower issue.
- E-12 is tripped high limit.
- E-13 is burner thermistor not reading the proper resistance.
- E-22 is ignition failure 3 times in a row and unit is in hard lock out.
- E-23 is primary flame rod.
What To Look For
E-0 means power is either too high or too low. Are the hertz correct? The only way I know how to check this is to ask the homeowner does the micro-wave keep time? It is the only clock in the home that runs off of hertz.
E-2 is very similar to an EE-2. Look at fuel distribution, tank height, fullness, flame sensor, ignitor, fuel nozzle and fuel pump.
E-6 is pretty much the same as the old EE-6; it is loss of flame 2 times in a row after pre-heat. With the new error code of E-12 it is not a tripped high limit. Usually it is something in the distribution of the fuel, check for kinked or frozen fuel lines, filter fuel being plugged, inlet screen, needle seat in the sump and pump.
E-8 is motor stuck, burnt out, disconnected revolution sensor or corrosion on the bottom of the revolution sensor wire connections, MCB.
E-12 is tripped high limit. The stove is getting too hot. Is it over firing, is the air filter screen or the fan surround dirty? Crud on the cutting edge of the fan blade or is something going on with the circulation blower motor (bearings, windings, power from main circuit board).
E-13 could be a disconnected burner thermistor wire, burner thermistor wire broken, faulty thermistor, MCB, too cold outside or bad flue.
E-22 Hard lock-out! E-2, 3 times in a row, un-plug for 30 minutes, and refer to E-2.
E-23 is primary flame rod is dirty, sooted or disconnected.
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