Lochinvar Part

Lochinvar Modulating Gas Valve

Modulating gas valve for combustion control on NOBLE, KNIGHT, ARMOR. Replacement requires combustion analysis re-trim.

Updated May 2026 · Lochinvar Water Heaters

Lochinvar modulating gas valves regulate gas flow precisely to match the blower\'s combustion air, maintaining target air-fuel ratio across the 10:1 turndown range. Different from on/off valves on atmospheric tanks — this is a precision device.

How it works

  • Pneumatic or electronic modulation
  • References negative pressure signal from venturi (pneumatic) or direct command from control board (electronic)
  • Adjusts gas flow to maintain constant CO2 % across firing rate
  • Initial trim set during commissioning with combustion analyzer

Symptoms of failure

  • E04 ignition lockouts despite good igniter and flame sensor
  • Combustion analyzer shows wildly wrong CO2/CO that can\'t be trimmed back to spec
  • Visible damage to valve body (corrosion, melted plastic)
  • Stuck valve — no gas flow when energized OR continuous gas flow

Diagnostic before replacement

  1. Verify gas supply pressure with manometer — 7" WC NG, 11" WC LP. Low pressure mimics valve failure
  2. Voltage at valve coil during call for heat — multimeter check
  3. Listen for click when valve commanded — silent valve may be electrical fault upstream
  4. Soap-test valve body for leaks — external leak ≠ internal valve fault

Replacement

  1. Gas off at boiler shutoff and meter
  2. Power off at breaker
  3. Disconnect valve electrical (often a single connector + ground)
  4. Disconnect gas line union ahead of valve
  5. Remove valve from manifold
  6. Install new valve with new gaskets/O-rings
  7. Restore gas; soap-test all joints
  8. Restore power; perform startup combustion analysis and trim adjustment

Critical: combustion analyzer re-trim required

Every gas valve replacement requires re-trimming with a combustion analyzer to verify and adjust:

  • CO2 at high fire (typically 8.5-9.5%)
  • CO2 at low fire (similar target)
  • CO ppm (below 100 ppm at all firing rates)
  • O2 % (typically 4-6%)

Without proper trim, the new valve may run rich (high CO, soot buildup) or lean (high O2, ignition issues). This is contractor work — analyzer costs $1,500-3,000 and requires training to use correctly.

Cost

  • Gas valve (OEM): $250-450
  • Contractor labor (including combustion analysis): $300-600
  • Total: $550-1,050

Bottom line

Gas valve replacement is contractor work with mandatory combustion analyzer follow-up. DIY without an analyzer is unsafe — wrong trim produces high CO or kills the heat exchanger via lean operation. Within warranty: Lochinvar covers parts; labor varies by program.