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Bradford White Water Heater Error Code 1 — Pilot Outage Fix

⚡ Quick Answer

Bradford White error code 1 means the pilot light went out or failed to light. Here's how to diagnose the thermocouple, thermopile, and gas valve — with parts and costs.

Bradford White water heaters with an Icon System control display error codes as a series of LED flashes. Error code 1 (one slow flash) means pilot outage — the pilot light went out or failed to establish during ignition.

No hot water. The fix is usually a $10–$25 thermocouple or thermopile, not a new water heater.

Jump to Fix


What Error Code 1 Means

The Icon System control on Bradford White gas water heaters flashes the status LED to communicate fault codes:

The control tried to sense the pilot flame and got no signal. This means either:

  1. The pilot is not lit
  2. The pilot lit but the thermocouple or thermopile isn’t generating enough voltage to tell the control
  3. The gas valve isn’t opening the pilot circuit

Models affected: Any Bradford White gas water heater with the Icon System control — typically units manufactured 2005 to present, including the Defender Safety System (DSI) and FVIR compliant models.


Most Common Causes

CauseHow commonFix
Pilot went out (draft, gas interruption)Very commonRelight per instructions on heater label
Thermocouple failed or looseVery commonReplace thermocouple ($8–$25)
Thermopile failed (low millivolt output)CommonReplace thermopile ($20–$55)
Pilot orifice cloggedOccasionalClean pilot assembly
Gas supply interruptedOccasionalCheck meter, shutoff valve, other appliances
Gas valve failureUncommonReplace gas valve ($90–$200)

Start with the simplest fix: relight the pilot. If it relights and holds, no parts needed. If it relights but the error returns within minutes, the thermocouple or thermopile is failing.


Step-by-Step Diagnosis

Step 1: Check the pilot

Look through the sight glass at the bottom of the water heater (or follow the relight instructions on the label). Is the pilot flame visible?

Step 2: Relight the pilot

Follow the relighting steps on the data plate (usually on the front of the heater). General procedure:

  1. Turn the gas control knob to OFF
  2. Wait 5 minutes to clear any accumulated gas
  3. Turn the knob to PILOT
  4. Press and hold the pilot button (or knob), then press the igniter button repeatedly until the pilot lights
  5. Continue holding the pilot button for 30–60 seconds after the pilot lights
  6. Release slowly — the pilot should stay lit
  7. Turn the knob to your desired temperature setting

If the pilot lights and holds, the error code should clear. If it goes out again within minutes, go to Step 3.

Step 3: Test the thermocouple voltage

A healthy thermocouple generates 25–30 millivolts when in a pilot flame. A failing one generates under 15 mV — not enough to hold the gas valve open.

To test:

  1. Use a multimeter set to DC millivolts
  2. Disconnect the thermocouple lead from the gas valve
  3. Relight the pilot and hold the button
  4. Touch the multimeter leads to the thermocouple tip and the connector
  5. Reading under 15 mV: Replace the thermocouple
  6. Reading 20+ mV but valve won’t stay open: Gas valve may be faulty

Step 4: Inspect the thermopile

Bradford White Defender Safety System models use a thermopile (two-wire) in addition to the thermocouple. The thermopile powers the Icon System control.

Normal thermopile output: 300–750 mV at operating temperature. Measure across the two thermopile wires at the gas valve:


How to Relight the Pilot

Full step-by-step with photos is on the Bradford White data plate. The Pilot Relight label is on the front of the heater. Follow it exactly — don’t skip the 5-minute gas purge wait.

If you smell gas at any point: Do not attempt to relight. Leave the area, don’t use any electrical switches, and call your gas utility.


Parts and Costs

PartBradford White OEM #Amazon equivalentCost
Thermocouple (standard)239-40336-00Universal 24” thermocouple$8–$18
Thermopile (Defender models)100-112568-07Honeywell Q340A1082 thermopile$20–$55
Gas valve (if valve fails test)239-48774-00Brand-specific, call Bradford White$90–$200
Pilot assembly (complete)239-41599-00Model-specific$35–$80

Tool needed: A 7/16” wrench or adjustable pliers to disconnect and reconnect the thermocouple nut. The replacement takes about 15 minutes on most models.

The thermocouple unscrews from the gas valve body (clockwise to tighten, counterclockwise to remove). Route the new one the same way as the old one to keep it in the pilot flame path.


When to Call a Tech

Call a licensed plumber or water heater technician if:

Average repair cost with a technician: $150–$350 for thermocouple/thermopile replacement including parts and labor. Gas valve replacement: $300–$600 installed.



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