les45 wrote:Actually found that it was fairly easy to disassemble this stove. The center bolt in each burner holds the whole thing together. Valves screw right out after pulling the knobs. Couldn't find anything obvious; all piping was intact and the O-rings looked good with still lots of factory grease on them. With this much uncertainty and the risk of fire, I've about decided to scrap the whole thing (except the small tank hose and wire stand) and just buy a new one. Cheap insurance.
It ain't "rocket science" (the Challenger disaster notwithstanding). Before throwing out the stove I'd see if I could get some slightly bigger O-Rings or at least new ones and install them with new teflon based grease. When I took apart my patio burner I didn't see anything obviously wrong but with new O-Rings it worked fine.
O-Rings are cheap. I'd give it a try. Any leak won't be a "gusher" and if you using a hose with remote tank and regulator you can turn off the gas a few feet away from the stove without the risk of burning yourself and the fire will go out quickly (if yer doing this where you can't set anything else on fire).
You should also blow out all of the venturis and gas passages of the stove with compressed air. Sometimes spiders, other critters, or debris gets in there and causes problems.
Never give up, never surrender.
Cheers,
Gus