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#1
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my
furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. I change the filter regularly. The old filter comes out visibly just as clean as the new filter I put in. There is plenty of airflow through the unit, as I can feel the cold draft hit my feet from across the room when the furnace kicks in. The flames are steady and clean blue. I have to close off all the bedrooms and heat only the living room and kitchen during the coldest months, otherwise the furnace would run 24/7 and the temperature would never get above 62. The pros say there's nothing wrong. |
#2
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
wrote in message ... I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. I change the filter regularly. The old filter comes out visibly just as clean as the new filter I put in. There is plenty of airflow through the unit, as I can feel the cold draft hit my feet from across the room when the furnace kicks in. The flames are steady and clean blue. I have to close off all the bedrooms and heat only the living room and kitchen during the coldest months, otherwise the furnace would run 24/7 and the temperature would never get above 62. The pros say there's nothing wrong. Something's wrong, but you did'nt say where you are loacted. In my area, you may need a furnace of 65,000-77,000 input to do the job for that house. And it sounds like your blower may be going way too fast. All are really guesses though, given the information it really takes to make a proper size analysis. You need tro try another pro; especially one who will look at the whole building, as well as the heating plant. HTH, Lefty |
#3
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 4, 2:20*pm, wrote:
I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. I change the filter regularly. The old filter comes out visibly just as clean as the new filter I put in. There is plenty of airflow through the unit, as I can feel the cold draft hit my feet from across the room when the furnace kicks in. The flames are steady and clean blue. I have to close off all the bedrooms and heat only the living room and kitchen during the coldest months, otherwise the furnace would run 24/7 and the temperature would never get above 62. The pros say there's nothing wrong. You do have AC right, have you actualy looked at the AC coil, my neighbor got a house where the AC coil passed no air it was so clogged, but you still need a Pro, not the hacks youve had out for beer money. |
#4
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
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#5
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 4, 3:40*pm, ransley wrote:
On Nov 4, 2:20*pm, wrote: I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. I change the filter regularly. The old filter comes out visibly just as clean as the new filter I put in. There is plenty of airflow through the unit, as I can feel the cold draft hit my feet from across the room when the furnace kicks in. The flames are steady and clean blue. I have to close off all the bedrooms and heat only the living room and kitchen during the coldest months, otherwise the furnace would run 24/7 and the temperature would never get above 62. The pros say there's nothing wrong. You do have AC right, have you actualy looked at the AC coil, my neighbor got a house where the AC coil passed no air it was so clogged, but you still need a Pro, not the hacks youve had out for beer money.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - I'm located in Rochester NY for the record, and I do have central air. There are two ratings on the furnace, one is 45,000BTU and the other is 61,500BTU, but the furnace was made in Quebec and everything written on it is in FRENCH! Online translators were no help in figuring out what the tag says... |
#6
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
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#7
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
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#8
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 12:20:37 -0800, mkirsch1 wrote:
The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. Can you get a thermometer into the plenum at all and check there (or at least whatever register's closest to the plenum)? Our system loses an insane amount of heat in the ductwork and there's about 40 degrees difference between the register nearest the furnace and the one furthest away (I did post actual numbers the other week, but can't remember what thread that was in, and I don't have them written down) Never tested the exhaust temp on ours. Maybe they always run hot at that point. Just wondering if your problem's the furnace or the ductwork... |
#9
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
DT wrote:
.... For starters, is the rerun air ducted, or is it an open return system? More to the point might be are the hot air runs insulated and/or in unheated spaces (like attic/crawlspace) or is there a break somewhere (like a flexible boot at the plenum outlet?) or a closed internal damper or, or, or, ...??? -- |
#10
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 4, 4:40*pm, Jules
wrote: On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 12:20:37 -0800, mkirsch1 wrote: The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. Can you get a thermometer into the plenum at all and check there (or at least whatever register's closest to the plenum)? Our system loses an insane amount of heat in the ductwork and there's about 40 degrees difference between the register nearest the furnace and the one furthest away (I did post actual numbers the other week, but can't remember what thread that was in, and I don't have them written down) Never tested the exhaust temp on ours. Maybe they always run hot at that point. Just wondering if your problem's the furnace or the ductwork... I used an infrared thermometer on the vent near the middle of a heating cycle when the air coming out felt the warmest. The temperature was in the low 70's. Ductwork is all uninsulated in a full basement. |
#11
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 4, 4:14*pm, DT wrote:
In article , says... I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. Boy, it sure doesn't seem right. I have a 10 year old, 80% efficient 60,000 btu Armstrong furnace for my 1500 sf house in northern Ohio. It puts out 115 degree air at the register closest to the furnace. The double walled flue is hot, but I can place my hand on it. The plenum is, of course, quite hot. I insulated it with high temperature fiberglass. The house is well insulated with ducted returns and easily heats all rooms over 70 degrees in 15 below zero weather, and only runs about half the time under those conditions. For starters, is the rerun air ducted, or is it an open return system? The return air is ducted. |
#12
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
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#13
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
wrote in message ... I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The pros say there's nothing wrong. The furnace may be working 100% correct but is way too small for the job you are asking it to do. I live in a much milder climate, Kentucky, have 2 -- 75,000 input rated units at 80%, one on each level, 1300 square foot per level. All ductwork is fully insulated. They work fine and can recover from the night time set back of 10 degrees until the temp gets down in the teens and then I can not set back more than 5 degrees. 1995 construction, walls R-13, about 8" of attic insulation, brick construction with a full, unfinished, unheated basement. If your AC works fine and you have good air flow at the registers then a blocked A coil is not you problem. You could have a limit control problem that a hasty tech did not stick around long enough to discover. -- Colbyt Please come visit www.househomerepair.com |
#14
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Wed, 04 Nov 2009 16:32:18 -0600, dpb wrote:
wrote: ... Ductwork is all uninsulated in a full basement. Well, DOH!!! Nice and toasty down there, I'd wager... Standard procedure in a full basement is to use bare, uninsulated ducts. I'm 100 miles or more north of Rochester in Ontario - 50,000/75000 BTU (2 stage) 80% efficiency furnace keeps my 1300 =/- sq ft house warm for under $700 a year.AFAIK it has never kicked up to high rate.The 600 sq ft basement is also heated. |
#15
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
I'm in a suburb of Rochester. Want me to drive over, and
take a look? Yeah, I know. Everyone on the list says I'm a total hack. I know, I know. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. wrote in message ... I'm located in Rochester NY for the record, and I do have central air. There are two ratings on the furnace, one is 45,000BTU and the other is 61,500BTU, but the furnace was made in Quebec and everything written on it is in FRENCH! Online translators were no help in figuring out what the tag says... |
#16
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
It sounds like something is totally wrong. Happy to come
over and take a look, if you wish. I'm in the phone book. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. wrote in message ... I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. I change the filter regularly. The old filter comes out visibly just as clean as the new filter I put in. There is plenty of airflow through the unit, as I can feel the cold draft hit my feet from across the room when the furnace kicks in. The flames are steady and clean blue. I have to close off all the bedrooms and heat only the living room and kitchen during the coldest months, otherwise the furnace would run 24/7 and the temperature would never get above 62. The pros say there's nothing wrong. |
#17
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
Probably BTU input and output. It's common for furnace to
list input which is total heat produced, and output to the house. Since there is air flow, that's got me wondering. Have to come out and see it, to get some ideas. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "dpb" wrote in message ... wrote: .... There are two ratings on the furnace, one is 45,000BTU and the other is 61,500BTU, but the furnace was made in Quebec and everything written on it is in FRENCH! Online translators were no help in figuring out what the tag says... One would presume those are either input/output ratings or gas/LP, perhaps as a secondary possibility. Undoubtedly there's somebody on group that could decipher the amount of French on an equipment tag... Failing that, undoubtedly there would be translation in Amana documentation on their site??? -- |
#18
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
I knew it! Already people are slamming me!
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "EXT" wrote in message anews.com... Whatever the rating, you need someone competent to service the furnace. |
#19
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
Would be interesting if the duct is broken some where, and
the suction from the return air is moving all the air. But, he said the plenum doesn't warm up. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "dpb" wrote in message ... More to the point might be are the hot air runs insulated and/or in unheated spaces (like attic/crawlspace) or is there a break somewhere (like a flexible boot at the plenum outlet?) or a closed internal damper or, or, or, ...??? -- |
#20
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
That's not good.
-- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. wrote in message ... I used an infrared thermometer on the vent near the middle of a heating cycle when the air coming out felt the warmest. The temperature was in the low 70's. Ductwork is all uninsulated in a full basement. |
#21
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
Of course, that's totally possible. Bad fan limit switch.
I've seen that before. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Van Chocstraw" wrote in message ... Your stack controls are out of adjustment. The blower should cut off at 80. It should cut on at 100. |
#22
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
Stormin Mormon wrote:
Probably BTU input and output. ... Isn't that what "One would presume those are .. input/output ratings" says??? I gave an alternate outside chance possibility but clearly stated it as such... -- |
#24
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
wrote
dpb wrote: Ductwork is all uninsulated in a full basement. Well, DOH!!! Nice and toasty down there, I'd wager... Standard procedure in a full basement is to use bare, uninsulated ducts. I'm 100 miles or more north of Rochester in Ontario - 50,000/75000 BTU (2 stage) 80% efficiency furnace keeps my 1300 =/- sq ft house warm for under $700 a year.AFAIK it has never kicked up to high rate.The 600 sq ft basement is also heated. Yup. Deliberate too. It's to protect the pipes from freezing. |
#25
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
cshenk wrote:
wrote dpb wrote: Ductwork is all uninsulated in a full basement. Well, DOH!!! Nice and toasty down there, I'd wager... Standard procedure in a full basement is to use bare, uninsulated ducts. I'm 100 miles or more north of Rochester in Ontario - 50,000/75000 BTU (2 stage) 80% efficiency furnace keeps my 1300 =/- sq ft house warm for under $700 a year.AFAIK it has never kicked up to high rate.The 600 sq ft basement is also heated. Yup. Deliberate too. It's to protect the pipes from freezing. Well, here it isn't--they'll duct it normally w/ vents in used space. Seems a terrible waste otherwise to heat w/o any control all that volume. -- |
#26
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
dpb wrote:
.... Well, here it isn't--they'll duct it normally w/ vents in used space. Seems a terrible waste otherwise to heat w/o any control all that volume. Anything built in the last 20 years or so anyway, that is. Back in the 60s and earlier one saw lots of things done that make no sense whatsoever under today's operating costs. That sorta' changed in the 70s and by 80s pretty much gone around here. -- |
#27
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
I reply to messages as I scroll through. I do not read all
the replies before commenting. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "dpb" wrote in message ... Stormin Mormon wrote: Probably BTU input and output. ... Isn't that what "One would presume those are .. input/output ratings" says??? I gave an alternate outside chance possibility but clearly stated it as such... -- |
#28
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
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#29
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
wrote in message
... I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The air coming out of the vents is cool, around 70 degreees according to my thermometer. The exhaust to the chimney is smokin' hot. The plenum does not get perceptibly warm. The pros say there's nothing wrong. My first thought is that the unit is a bit on the small size for that house but I don't know the construction. That said, if it has been there for 10 years it must have done the job at some point. You should be getting more than 70 degree air While the stack will be hot, it may be much more than needed. Sounds like there could be a problem with the heat exchanger if heated air is getting by. I think what you really need as a more competent service tech. They should be taking the temperature of both the stack and the plenum. |
#30
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Wed, 4 Nov 2009 18:11:57 -0500, "Colbyt"
wrote: wrote in message ... I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The pros say there's nothing wrong. The furnace may be working 100% correct but is way too small for the job you are asking it to do. I live in a much milder climate, Kentucky, have 2 -- 75,000 input rated units at 80%, one on each level, 1300 square foot per level. All ductwork is fully insulated. They work fine and can recover from the night time set back of 10 degrees until the temp gets down in the teens and then I can not set back more than 5 degrees. 1995 construction, walls R-13, about 8" of attic insulation, brick construction with a full, unfinished, unheated basement. If your AC works fine and you have good air flow at the registers then a blocked A coil is not you problem. You could have a limit control problem that a hasty tech did not stick around long enough to discover. That furnace is NOT undersized if the house is reasonably well insulated. The only reason the furnace in my house is as big as it is, is I could not buy one smaller. Perfect size would have the furnace running full time on the coldest day to maintain temperature. My furnace has NEVER run over 8 hours in a day. - which means at 50,000 BTU it is TOO BIG. You loose a LOT of efficiency if the unit is too big. |
#31
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
Colbyt wrote:
wrote in message ... I'm tired of people telling me that there's nothing wrong with my furnace. There is something wrong with my furnace. It's a 10-year-old Amana 45,000 BTU, 80% efficient unit in a 1300 square foot ranch style house. This is my 4th winter in this house, and I'm sick of being limited to one habitable room all winter. The pros say there's nothing wrong. The furnace may be working 100% correct but is way too small for the job you are asking it to do. I live in a much milder climate, Kentucky, have 2 -- 75,000 input rated units at 80%, one on each level, 1300 square foot per level. All ductwork is fully insulated. They work fine and can recover from the night time set back of 10 degrees until the temp gets down in the teens and then I can not set back more than 5 degrees. 1995 construction, walls R-13, about 8" of attic insulation, brick construction with a full, unfinished, unheated basement. If your AC works fine and you have good air flow at the registers then a blocked A coil is not you problem. You could have a limit control problem that a hasty tech did not stick around long enough to discover. Hi, If it is limit control problem, flame will be off with blower running. Easy to see it. |
#32
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
Stormin Mormon wrote:
I reply to messages as I scroll through. I do not read all the replies before commenting. you should damn well at least read the message to which you _do_ reply. -- |
#33
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 4, 6:33*pm, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: Of course, that's totally possible. Bad fan limit switch. I've seen that before. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus *www.lds.org . "Van Chocstraw" wrote in ... Your stack controls are out of adjustment. The blower should cut off at 80. It should cut on at 100. What temp the fan cuts on and off at doesn't explain how he has only 70F air coming out of the vents with the furnace fired and running steady and why most of the house is cold. |
#34
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 5, 7:52*am, wrote:
On Nov 4, 6:33*pm, "Stormin Mormon" wrote: Of course, that's totally possible. Bad fan limit switch. I've seen that before. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus *www.lds.org . "Van Chocstraw" wrote in ... Your stack controls are out of adjustment. The blower should cut off at 80. It should cut on at 100. What temp the fan cuts on and off at doesn't explain how he has only 70F air coming out of the vents with the furnace fired and running steady and why most of the house is cold.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It can be explained by a clogged AC coil, I saw that once at a friends house, we just removed it for the winter and he got heat until he had time to powerwash it. Has he or anyone even looked at his AC coil yet, nope I bet not. |
#35
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
ransley wrote:
On Nov 5, 7:52 am, wrote: On Nov 4, 6:33 pm, "Stormin Mormon" wrote: Of course, that's totally possible. Bad fan limit switch. I've seen that before. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org . "Van Chocstraw" wrote in ... Your stack controls are out of adjustment. The blower should cut off at 80. It should cut on at 100. What temp the fan cuts on and off at doesn't explain how he has only 70F air coming out of the vents with the furnace fired and running steady and why most of the house is cold.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It can be explained by a clogged AC coil, I saw that once at a friends house, we just removed it for the winter and he got heat until he had time to powerwash it. Has he or anyone even looked at his AC coil yet, nope I bet not. Just for future reference, how would a clogged AC coil cause the issue? I barely understand basics of HVAC ) |
#36
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
Both the heat air and the AC air go through the AC coil. If
the AC coil is clogged, you won't get much air flow through the furnace. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. wrote in message m... It can be explained by a clogged AC coil, I saw that once at a friends house, we just removed it for the winter and he got heat until he had time to powerwash it. Has he or anyone even looked at his AC coil yet, nope I bet not. Just for future reference, how would a clogged AC coil cause the issue? I barely understand basics of HVAC ) |
#37
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 5, 10:37*am, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: Both the heat air and the AC air go through the AC coil. If the AC coil is clogged, you won't get much air flow through the furnace. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus *www.lds.org . wrote in message m... It can be explained by a clogged AC coil, I saw that once at a friends house, we just removed it for the winter and he got heat until he had time to powerwash it. Has he or anyone even looked at his AC coil yet, nope I bet not. Just for future reference, how would a clogged AC coil cause the issue? * I barely understand basics of HVAC ) If the air flow is low, the over-temperature sensor may cut off the heat whether it is gas or oil-fired, causing not enough heat. It could also be a bad sensor, or a sensor that is set too low that is the problem. |
#38
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Nov 4, 5:32*pm, dpb wrote:
Ductwork is all uninsulated in a full basement. Well, DOH!!! *Nice and toasty down there, I'd wager... Nope, it's actually COLDER. |
#39
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furnace blowing all the heat up the chimney
On Thu, 5 Nov 2009 07:32:02 -0800 (PST), ransley
wrote: On Nov 5, 7:52Â*am, wrote: On Nov 4, 6:33Â*pm, "Stormin Mormon" wrote: Of course, that's totally possible. Bad fan limit switch. I've seen that before. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus Â*www.lds.org . "Van Chocstraw" wrote in ... Your stack controls are out of adjustment. The blower should cut off at 80. It should cut on at 100. What temp the fan cuts on and off at doesn't explain how he has only 70F air coming out of the vents with the furnace fired and running steady and why most of the house is cold.- Hide quoted text - - Show quoted text - It can be explained by a clogged AC coil, I saw that once at a friends house, we just removed it for the winter and he got heat until he had time to powerwash it. Has he or anyone even looked at his AC coil yet, nope I bet not. OP said he has good air flow (he feels a strong cool breeze0? |
#40
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