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#1
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I know what happens electrically with my current old oil furnace when
the oil doesn't ignite. A relay is tripped that has to be reset mechanically with a red button. But someday soon I may need a new furnace and I don't know how they work. Here is the reason: I'm getting a new burglar alarm (mine went up in smoke, literally) and my friend told me they had a built-in temp sensor, to notify them if the house temp got too low. It turns out this model requires an add-on switch, and while trying to decide where to put it and how to wire it, it occurred to me: Why wait until the house is getting too cold. Then if I'm away, my friends only have a day or two to get there and fix the furnace and warm the place up. Why not also notify the monitoring company there is a problem when the furnace first tries to ignite and can't (no fuel, nozzle clogged, furnace broken, etc.) My current furnace has a mechanical relay, a latching relay I presume???? and if it is not double pole or double throw, I could buy a latching relay that is, and use it instead and connect the unused pole to notify the alarm that the furnace needs resetting. I would give that its own zone, so that I would notice it even when I was home, when setting the alarm. But I'm guessing everything is transistorized in a new furnace I buy. I don't have trouble working with IC's and circuit boards, but that doesn't mean there will be a place to connect. Is there any way to do the same thing with the new furnace? Is there a brand of furnace that would make this easier than other brands? |
#2
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There may be depending upon the burner, however the problem with your
current thinking is that the burner primary control,(the box with the reset) doesn't necessarily have power to it at all times. Once other parts of the control system send power to the primary, its internal controls assure that the burner makes fire, and if not, locks it out. Without building a complicated contraption, the easiest solution would be a temperature sensing device and a phone dialer. "mm" wrote in message ... I know what happens electrically with my current old oil furnace when the oil doesn't ignite. A relay is tripped that has to be reset mechanically with a red button. But someday soon I may need a new furnace and I don't know how they work. Here is the reason: I'm getting a new burglar alarm (mine went up in smoke, literally) and my friend told me they had a built-in temp sensor, to notify them if the house temp got too low. It turns out this model requires an add-on switch, and while trying to decide where to put it and how to wire it, it occurred to me: Why wait until the house is getting too cold. Then if I'm away, my friends only have a day or two to get there and fix the furnace and warm the place up. Why not also notify the monitoring company there is a problem when the furnace first tries to ignite and can't (no fuel, nozzle clogged, furnace broken, etc.) My current furnace has a mechanical relay, a latching relay I presume???? and if it is not double pole or double throw, I could buy a latching relay that is, and use it instead and connect the unused pole to notify the alarm that the furnace needs resetting. I would give that its own zone, so that I would notice it even when I was home, when setting the alarm. But I'm guessing everything is transistorized in a new furnace I buy. I don't have trouble working with IC's and circuit boards, but that doesn't mean there will be a place to connect. Is there any way to do the same thing with the new furnace? Is there a brand of furnace that would make this easier than other brands? |
#3
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While I'm sure you can figure out a way to do this, I doubt it's worth
all the trouble, such as trying to decypher and wire into the electronicc ontrols of a brand new furnace. As noted, the burglar alarm has the ability to monitor temp. As long as the temp to set off the alarm can be set to just below the temp you keep the house at, say 3 to 5 degrees, I don;t see where the furnace alarm is going to give much additional benefit. If the alarm doesn't allow a temp you like, but has external inputs, I'd just hook up a termostat to it. I see 2 scenarios. One, it's winter and 10 degrees outside and the furnace fails to start. The only thing you gain with the furnace alarm is the time it takes for the house to drop 3 degrees, which might be an hour or two at most, which hardly seems worth the trouble, as you still have quite a bit of time before anything is going to freeze. Or other scenario is it's Fall and 40 outside, in which case it may take 6 hours to drop and trigger the alarm. But, in that case, you have days to fix the furnace. |
#4
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I'm sure there is a way to connect the alarm someplace on the furnace
indicating it's in lockout. On some of the gas boilers with electronic ignition, there are terminals on the module that normally close or open in case of lockout, or send some kind of voltage to those terminals if you want to connect a signaling device such as a light or buzzer. I have a 2 year old Trane XR80 furnace. I'm not sure if there are terminals on the circuit board to connect an alarm, but it's a very good idea you have. I have to look at the schematic. |
#5
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While gas burners tend to have more sophisticated controls than oil burners
and would probably be easier to tie and alarm to the lockout function, you'd still be leaving yourself vulnerable to failures of other parts of the system, like thermostat failure or wiring failure or power failure. Ultimately temperature is what you're concerned with, and the simplest thing to tie an alarm to "RBM" rbm2(remove wrote in message ... There may be depending upon the burner, however the problem with your current thinking is that the burner primary control,(the box with the reset) doesn't necessarily have power to it at all times. Once other parts of the control system send power to the primary, its internal controls assure that the burner makes fire, and if not, locks it out. Without building a complicated contraption, the easiest solution would be a temperature sensing device and a phone dialer. "mm" wrote in message ... I know what happens electrically with my current old oil furnace when the oil doesn't ignite. A relay is tripped that has to be reset mechanically with a red button. But someday soon I may need a new furnace and I don't know how they work. Here is the reason: I'm getting a new burglar alarm (mine went up in smoke, literally) and my friend told me they had a built-in temp sensor, to notify them if the house temp got too low. It turns out this model requires an add-on switch, and while trying to decide where to put it and how to wire it, it occurred to me: Why wait until the house is getting too cold. Then if I'm away, my friends only have a day or two to get there and fix the furnace and warm the place up. Why not also notify the monitoring company there is a problem when the furnace first tries to ignite and can't (no fuel, nozzle clogged, furnace broken, etc.) My current furnace has a mechanical relay, a latching relay I presume???? and if it is not double pole or double throw, I could buy a latching relay that is, and use it instead and connect the unused pole to notify the alarm that the furnace needs resetting. I would give that its own zone, so that I would notice it even when I was home, when setting the alarm. But I'm guessing everything is transistorized in a new furnace I buy. I don't have trouble working with IC's and circuit boards, but that doesn't mean there will be a place to connect. Is there any way to do the same thing with the new furnace? Is there a brand of furnace that would make this easier than other brands? |
#6
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#7
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On Sat, 6 May 2006 07:19:34 -0400, "RBM" rbm2(remove
wrote: There may be depending upon the burner, however the problem with your current thinking is that the burner primary control,(the box with the reset) doesn't necessarily have power to it at all times. Once other parts of the control system send power to the primary, its internal controls assure that the burner makes fire, and if not, locks it out. Without building a complicated contraption, the easiest solution would be a temperature sensing device and a phone dialer. Are you talking about the new electronic furnaces, or my barely electronic one? (Currently I have 15 resistors, 10 little capacitors, a few transistors, and that relay with the red button in a little grey box a little taller than a box of kitchen matches.) BTW, I am also going to have the temp sensor and, because my friend owns the burglar alarm company, the whole digital communicator bit, with monitoring. And the alarm comes with built-in power failure notification. But if I can get myself another day or two, it doesn't have to be the easiest solution. After all this would be a fun project. "mm" wrote in message .. . I know what happens electrically with my current old oil furnace when the oil doesn't ignite. A relay is tripped that has to be reset mechanically with a red button. But someday soon I may need a new furnace and I don't know how they work. Here is the reason: I'm getting a new burglar alarm (mine went up in smoke, literally) and my friend told me they had a built-in temp sensor, to notify them if the house temp got too low. It turns out this model requires an add-on switch, and while trying to decide where to put it and how to wire it, it occurred to me: Why wait until the house is getting too cold. Then if I'm away, my friends only have a day or two to get there and fix the furnace and warm the place up. Why not also notify the monitoring company there is a problem when the furnace first tries to ignite and can't (no fuel, nozzle clogged, furnace broken, etc.) My current furnace has a mechanical relay, a latching relay I presume???? and if it is not double pole or double throw, I could buy a latching relay that is, and use it instead and connect the unused pole to notify the alarm that the furnace needs resetting. I would give that its own zone, so that I would notice it even when I was home, when setting the alarm. But I'm guessing everything is transistorized in a new furnace I buy. I don't have trouble working with IC's and circuit boards, but that doesn't mean there will be a place to connect. Is there any way to do the same thing with the new furnace? Is there a brand of furnace that would make this easier than other brands? |
#8
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drain the pipes. plug in some electric thermostat controlled heaters.
point your webcam at the digital thermometers on the wall into which you have installed new batteries. ![]() see some alarm ideas on ebay: Freeze Alarm With Voice Dialer |
#9
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mm wrote:
I know what happens electrically with my current old oil furnace when the oil doesn't ignite. A relay is tripped that has to be reset mechanically with a red button. But someday soon I may need a new furnace and I don't know how they work. Here is the reason: I'm getting a new burglar alarm (mine went up in smoke, literally) and my friend told me they had a built-in temp sensor, to notify them if the house temp got too low. It turns out this model requires an add-on switch, and while trying to decide where to put it and how to wire it, it occurred to me: Why wait until the house is getting too cold. Then if I'm away, my friends only have a day or two to get there and fix the furnace and warm the place up. Why not also notify the monitoring company there is a problem when the furnace first tries to ignite and can't (no fuel, nozzle clogged, furnace broken, etc.) My current furnace has a mechanical relay, a latching relay I presume???? and if it is not double pole or double throw, I could buy a latching relay that is, and use it instead and connect the unused pole to notify the alarm that the furnace needs resetting. I would give that its own zone, so that I would notice it even when I was home, when setting the alarm. But I'm guessing everything is transistorized in a new furnace I buy. I don't have trouble working with IC's and circuit boards, but that doesn't mean there will be a place to connect. Is there any way to do the same thing with the new furnace? Is there a brand of furnace that would make this easier than other brands? In the daze of my youth, we just used a 120 volt rated thermostatat to switch on a red bulb in the front window if the room temperature dropped because the furnace failed. The friendly neighbors would take care of it from there. Not eggsackly foolproof if you lost power or that one lightbulb decided to fail there's better ways now. No "red light district" jokes please, we heard 'em all back then. Thanks for the mammaries, Jeff -- Jeffry Wisnia (W1BSV + Brass Rat '57 EE) "Truth exists; only falsehood has to be invented." |
#11
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On Mon, 08 May 2006 11:34:29 GMT, (Matt Howell)
wrote: In article , says... mm wrote: I know what happens electrically with my current old oil furnace when the oil doesn't ignite. A relay is tripped that has to be reset mechanically with a red button. But someday soon I may need a new furnace and I don't know how they work. Here is the reason: I'm getting a new burglar alarm (mine went up in smoke, literally) and my friend told me they had a built-in temp sensor, to notify them if the house temp got too low. It turns out this model requires an add-on switch, and while trying to decide where to put it and how to wire it, it occurred to me: Why wait until the house is getting too cold. Then if I'm away, my friends only have a day or two to get there and fix the furnace and warm the place up. Why not also notify the monitoring company there is a problem when the furnace first tries to ignite and can't (no fuel, nozzle clogged, furnace broken, etc.) My current furnace has a mechanical relay, a latching relay I presume???? and if it is not double pole or double throw, I could buy a latching relay that is, and use it instead and connect the unused pole to notify the alarm that the furnace needs resetting. I would give that its own zone, so that I would notice it even when I was home, when setting the alarm. But I'm guessing everything is transistorized in a new furnace I buy. I don't have trouble working with IC's and circuit boards, but that doesn't mean there will be a place to connect. Is there any way to do the same thing with the new furnace? Is there a brand of furnace that would make this easier than other brands? In the daze of my youth, we just used a 120 volt rated thermostatat to switch on a red bulb in the front window if the room temperature dropped because the furnace failed. The friendly neighbors would take care of it from there. Not eggsackly foolproof if you lost power or that one lightbulb decided to fail there's better ways now. FWIW One neighbor is good, the others fair, but the trees have gotten so big, I can barely see the street from my windows,and they can't see my house. Jeff Jeffry Wisnia Check out the following link. This is an oil burner primary control with alarm contacts that could easily be incorporated in your alarm system. http://customer.honeywell.com/Honeyw...spx/R7184U1004 This looks great. Thanks so much. |
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