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Empire DV-215-7SG direct vent wall furnace Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Empire DV-215-7SG direct vent wall furnace, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

Empire DV-215-7SG direct vent wall furnace
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Browse Parts for DV-215-7SG Direct Vent Wall Furnace

  • Package Hardware for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part TH-351

    #NI

    All parts diagram

    Package Hardware

    Part #TH-351

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Pilot Burner for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part 762232

    Unit parts diagram

    Pilot Burner

    Part #762232

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Furnace Pilot Burner Lp Gas Orifice for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part 742266

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    Furnace Pilot Burner Lp Gas Orifice

    Part #742266

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Burner Orfc for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part 742133

    Unit parts diagram

    Burner Orfc

    Part #742133

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Pilot Orifice for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part 742158

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    Pilot Orifice

    Part #742158

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Blower (115 Vac) Dv-210 & Dv-215 Only for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part DVB-1

    Blower assembly diagram

    Blower (115 Vac) Dv-210 & Dv-215 Only

    Part #DVB-1

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Gasket for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part TH-281

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    Gasket

    Part #TH-281

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Switch Box for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part DV-806

    Blower assembly diagram

    Switch Box

    Part #DV-806

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Nut for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part 852098

    Unit parts diagram

    Nut

    Part #852098

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Cnvrsn-kit for Empire DV-215-7SG - Part 682254

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    All parts diagram

    Cnvrsn-kit

    Part #682254

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

Empire Direct Vent Wall Furnace DV-215-7SG FAQs

Yes. Direct vent heaters like the Empire DV-215-7SG are typically efficient because they pull combustion air from outdoors and vent exhaust outdoors through a sealed system; that reduces drafts and helps keep indoor air more stable while delivering steady, zone-style heat.

What “efficient” means for a direct vent wall furnace

Direct vent designs are built to control where air comes from and where exhaust goes. That usually improves comfort and reduces wasted heat compared with older, non-sealed venting setups.

Common efficiency advantages include:

  • Sealed combustion helps reduce cold-air infiltration into the room
  • More consistent room temperature (good for spot heating)
  • Less heat loss from relying on indoor air for combustion
  • Reliable operation in many locations when properly vented

Factors that most affect real-world efficiency

Even a high-performing heater can waste energy if installation or maintenance is off. For the DV-215-7SG, these are the biggest drivers:

  • Venting condition and correct termination outdoors
  • Burner cleanliness and correct flame pattern
  • Proper gas pressure and regulator performance
  • Thermostat placement and settings
  • Room insulation and air sealing (especially around doors and windows)

Quick comparison: direct vent vs. other common venting styles

Heater type Combustion air source Exhaust path Typical comfort/efficiency impact
Direct vent wall furnace Outdoors Outdoors (sealed) Strong comfort and efficiency potential
Natural draft (older style) Indoors Chimney/flue More drafts; more room air used
Vent-free (unvented) Indoors None High heat-in-room, but requires strict room and safety considerations

Why it matters

Higher efficiency usually means lower fuel use for the same comfort level. With a direct vent wall furnace, the sealed venting approach often translates into fewer drafts, steadier heat, and better performance in spaces like basements, garages, cabins, and additions.

Parts and repair help

If your heater is running but not heating well, we recommend checking the parts list for the Empire DV-215-7SG on this model page first. For broader parts lookup by model number, use Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

To size a gas wall heater for a space, we match the heater’s BTU output to the room’s square footage and heat loss. For most homes, a practical starting point is about 20 BTU per square foot, then adjust up for colder climates, poor insulation, or high ceilings.

Quick sizing method (BTU estimate)

  1. Measure the room length and width.
  2. Multiply to get square feet.
  3. Multiply square feet by a BTU factor.
  • Mild climate, good insulation: 15 to 20 BTU/ft²
  • Average conditions: 20 to 25 BTU/ft²
  • Cold climate, older home, or lots of glass: 25 to 35 BTU/ft²

Example

  • 200 ft² room × 20 BTU/ft² = 4,000 BTU (starting point)

Adjustments that change the BTU you need

Use these common “bump up” checks when sizing a direct vent wall furnace like the Empire DV-215-7SG:

  • Ceiling height over 8 ft: increase BTU estimate (more air volume)
  • Poor insulation or drafts: increase BTU estimate
  • Many windows or exterior walls: increase BTU estimate
  • Room opens to other areas: size for the combined space if air freely mixes
  • You want faster warm-up: modestly higher BTU can help (within safe installation limits)

Sizing cheat sheet

Room size (ft²) Typical BTU range
100 1,500 to 3,500
200 3,000 to 7,000
300 4,500 to 10,500
500 7,500 to 17,500

Why it matters

Correct sizing helps your heater run more steadily, improves comfort, and avoids short cycling from oversizing or inadequate heat from undersizing.

Parts and support for your model

For Empire DV-215-7SG repair parts and diagrams, start with the parts list for your model; if you are searching beyond what’s shown, use Sears PartsDirect to look up parts by model number.

Last updated: February 2026

That “jump” happens because 90%+ AFUE furnaces are condensing designs that pull additional heat out of the flue gases (including latent heat from water vapor), while ~80% furnaces are non-condensing and vent hotter exhaust. The Empire DV-215-7SG direct vent wall furnace is a non-condensing style heater, so it is not in the 80% to 90% condensing category.

What changes between ~80% and ~90% AFUE

The efficiency increase is mainly a design change, not a tune-up change.

  • Secondary heat exchanger captures more heat from exhaust
  • Condensate management is added (drain/collector because water is produced)
  • Cooler exhaust allows different venting materials and routing
  • Corrosion-resistant components are used where condensation occurs
  • Tighter combustion control is common (sealed combustion, better airflow control)

Quick comparison

AFUE range Furnace type Key feature What you will see in the system
~80% Non-condensing Single primary heat exchanger Hotter flue pipe, no condensate drain
~90% to 98% Condensing Primary + secondary heat exchanger Condensate drain, cooler venting, more complex exhaust/intake

Why this matters for an Empire DV-215-7SG wall heater

DV-215-7SG is a direct vent wall furnace; it uses a sealed combustion path and vents combustion gases outdoors, but it does not use condensing technology. That means:

  • You will not have a condensate drain system to maintain like a 90%+ furnace
  • Venting and combustion air restrictions still matter, but symptoms differ from condensing units
  • Efficiency improvements typically come from proper installation, clean burner/air passages, and correct venting, not from adding a secondary heat exchanger

Practical takeaway when shopping or comparing

When you compare heaters, treat “80% vs 90%” as a condensing vs non-condensing decision. For DV-215-7SG parts and model-specific diagrams, start with the model number, then use Sears PartsDirect to search and compare similar Empire wall heaters by model.

Last updated: February 2026

For whole-home heating, the most energy efficient furnace type is a high-efficiency condensing gas furnace (typically 90 to 98+ AFUE). Your Empire DV-215-7SG is a direct vent wall furnace used for zone heating; it is a different design than a condensing central furnace, so efficiency comparisons should be made by the unit’s rating and how you use it.

Most efficient furnace types (and where they fit)

  • Condensing gas furnace (central): highest AFUE; best for whole-home ducted systems.
  • Non-condensing gas furnace (central): lower AFUE; simpler venting.
  • Electric resistance heat: near-100% at the appliance, but often higher operating cost.
  • Heat pump: very efficient in moderate climates; efficiency drops as outdoor temps fall.

Quick comparison (typical efficiency metrics)

Heating type Typical efficiency metric Typical range Common use
Condensing gas furnace AFUE 90 to 98+ Whole-home, ducted
Non-condensing gas furnace AFUE 80 to 89 Whole-home, ducted
Direct vent wall furnace (like DV-215-7SG) AFUE (varies by model) Commonly lower than condensing furnaces Zone heating, single area
Heat pump HSPF2/SEER2 Varies by climate Whole-home or supplemental

How to get the best efficiency from an Empire DV-215-7SG wall furnace

  • Keep the outside vent termination clear of snow, leaves, and debris.
  • Vacuum dust from the front grille and louvers to maintain airflow.
  • Use it for zone heating (heat the rooms you use most, lower the rest).
  • Keep doors to the heated area closed to reduce heat loss.
  • Have combustion issues corrected promptly (soot, unusual odors, delayed ignition).

Why it matters

“Most efficient” depends on the job. Condensing furnaces lead for whole-home AFUE, while a direct vent wall furnace can be cost-effective when used to heat a specific zone efficiently and safely.

For model-based parts lookup and diagrams, start with the DV-215-7SG parts list, or search by model on Sears PartsDirect.

Last updated: February 2026

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