Weil-McLain A44 Error Code — What It Means
The A44 code on Weil-McLain AquaBalance boilers signals a temperature-sensor fault. The control has detected that a sensor is bad, disconnected, or reading outside the expected range. When this fault occurs, the boiler stops operation to prevent unsafe conditions. The problem lies in the sensor circuit itself, which includes the thermistor element, its wiring harness, connectors, and the control-board input that receives the signal.
This is not a combustion or flame fault. It is an input problem: the boiler cannot trust the temperature data it is receiving. Until the sensor circuit is repaired and the code is cleared, the unit will not resume normal operation.
Before You Replace Anything
Technicians sometimes replace the control board first, but most A44 faults trace to the sensor or its wiring. Always test the sensor circuit and harness continuity before condemning the board.
Common Causes
- Failed temperature sensor (~50%) The thermistor element has failed open, short, or drifted out of range, so the control sees an invalid signal.
- Loose or damaged sensor wiring (~30%) Rubbed insulation, pinched wires, bad crimps, or poor connector pin fit create an open or intermittent circuit between the sensor and the control.
- Sensor unseated or misplaced (~10%) The sensor is not fully inserted in its well or mounting point, causing poor thermal contact and unstable readings.
- Control-board input failure (~10%) If the sensor and wiring test good but the fault remains, the control-board input that reads the sensor may be damaged.
Quick Diagnosis
Answer these to narrow it down fast.
Does the code appear immediately on startup, or does it show only after the burner has run?
No: A code that appears after heating suggests the sensor is losing contact under thermal expansion or vibration. Check sensor seating and look for chafed wires near hot surfaces.
Does wiggling the sensor harness make the code come and go?
No: The fault is steady. Measure the sensor circuit at both ends to isolate whether the sensor or the control input has failed.
After replacing the sensor, does the A44 clear and stay off through a full heating cycle?
No: The fault is in the wiring or control board. Recheck harness continuity and connector pin fit, then evaluate the control input if those are good.
Step-by-Step Fix
- Identify your exact model and locate the manual so you know which sensor the A44 code references and where it is mounted on your AquaBalance unit.
- Inspect the sensor harness and connectors for cut, rubbed, pinched, or heat-damaged insulation, loose terminals, corroded pins, or backed-out connectors.
- Check that the sensor is fully seated in its well or mounting boss and making good thermal contact with the component it monitors.
- Measure the sensor circuit at the sensor terminals and again at the control harness to verify continuity and stable resistance or voltage, consulting your model’s diagnostic table for expected values.
- Perform a wiggle test by gently flexing the harness and connectors while the boiler is powered and watching for code recurrence or reading dropouts that reveal intermittent opens.
- Replace the sensor if it reads open, short, or out of range, or if swapping with a known-good sensor of the same type clears the fault.
- Clear the fault code and restart the boiler, then verify that the temperature display is stable and the unit completes a full heating cycle without the A44 returning.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Temperature sensor or thermistor for Weil-McLain AquaBalance | Amazon | Confirm the exact model and sensor location before ordering; different AquaBalance units may use different sensors. |
| Sensor harness or connector repair kit | Amazon | Use if the wiring or terminals are damaged but the sensor itself tests good. |
| Boiler control board (module) | Amazon | Replace only after proving the sensor and harness are good but the fault persists, indicating a failed control input. |
When to Call a Pro
Call a licensed boiler technician for an A44 fault. Gas-fired boilers require combustion-safety knowledge, proper diagnostic tools to measure sensor circuits accurately, and familiarity with Weil-McLain control logic. A pro will isolate whether the fault is in the sensor, wiring, or control board, test the circuit under operating conditions, and replace only the failed component. Misdiagnosing this code and replacing the wrong part wastes money and leaves the boiler unsafe. If you see the A44 code, do not attempt to bypass the sensor or force the unit to run. Document any recent service or part changes and share that history with your technician to speed diagnosis.
Rough cost: A pro service call runs about $200-400.