I know this isn't garage related but I thought I would ask the AC experts here hoping this would save me some digging.
Short version:
Old gas central air system. Fan seems to work correct fine on heat cycle but does not turn on when I try the fan only (no heat or AC) nor when I use the AC. Fan does turn on when I use the manual setting on the thermostatic fan switch mounted in the air flow between the heat exchanger and the AC evaporator.
Long story:
My home central air system is an OLD ThermoPride gas furnace + AC on the output. I'm guessing the AC was added later as it's not built into the ThermoPride's large housing. I bought this place about a year back so I can't tell you about the history of the unit. Yes, it's old and I am tempted to replace it. A warranty was thrown in when we bought the house.
Anyway, last fall (ie when we would use the heat, not the AC) the system wasn't working so we called out the service guys. I don't remember the exact problem but the first attempted fix was replacing the Honeywell fan relay. That didn't fix things so they replaced the fan's thermostatic control that sits above the furnace but below the AC evaporator. I believe that device is basically meant to delay turning on the fan until the furnace heat exchanger warms up a bit and perhaps more importantly, keep the fan running until air temperatures drop again.
Fast forward to this spring. Time to turn the AC on. Nothing but a tripped 120V breaker. (Note the actual AC compressor is on a separate 240V line). Call the AC guys and they replace the motor. After the repair I had two problems, 1, basically no air flow when the fan was on. 2, the only way to get the fan to turn on was use the manual bypass feature of the Honeywell thermostatic control. The AC compressor does run without the fan (the coil quickly ices over). Since I don't recall this fan problem last winter today I tried turning on the heat. It seemed to work just fine. Burner started, once the temp rose a bit the fan turned on. Turn the heat off and the fan shut down after the temp dropped back down.
My guess is the guy who worked on the system last fall didn't actually wire the replacement fan relay correctly and the system is (again my guess) only turning on when the thermostatic switch says go, either manually or due to hot air. I don't know where the normal fan "ON" signal comes from (thermostat, AC compressor, and/or some part of the furnace system?). The fan does not turn on when I set the thermostat to FAN ONLY. I'm guessing that thermostatic switch is a back up to make sure the heat exchanger is cooled off after the thermostat tells the heat to turn off. I assume the fan relay (or what ever it is that takes a signal to turn on the fan) should be able to take more than one input.
Any suggestions what I should look for? I'm quite comfortable working on things like this in general but I've spent almost no time working on home HVACs so I really don't know how they are set up.
Thanks!
Short version:
Old gas central air system. Fan seems to work correct fine on heat cycle but does not turn on when I try the fan only (no heat or AC) nor when I use the AC. Fan does turn on when I use the manual setting on the thermostatic fan switch mounted in the air flow between the heat exchanger and the AC evaporator.
Long story:
My home central air system is an OLD ThermoPride gas furnace + AC on the output. I'm guessing the AC was added later as it's not built into the ThermoPride's large housing. I bought this place about a year back so I can't tell you about the history of the unit. Yes, it's old and I am tempted to replace it. A warranty was thrown in when we bought the house.
Anyway, last fall (ie when we would use the heat, not the AC) the system wasn't working so we called out the service guys. I don't remember the exact problem but the first attempted fix was replacing the Honeywell fan relay. That didn't fix things so they replaced the fan's thermostatic control that sits above the furnace but below the AC evaporator. I believe that device is basically meant to delay turning on the fan until the furnace heat exchanger warms up a bit and perhaps more importantly, keep the fan running until air temperatures drop again.
Fast forward to this spring. Time to turn the AC on. Nothing but a tripped 120V breaker. (Note the actual AC compressor is on a separate 240V line). Call the AC guys and they replace the motor. After the repair I had two problems, 1, basically no air flow when the fan was on. 2, the only way to get the fan to turn on was use the manual bypass feature of the Honeywell thermostatic control. The AC compressor does run without the fan (the coil quickly ices over). Since I don't recall this fan problem last winter today I tried turning on the heat. It seemed to work just fine. Burner started, once the temp rose a bit the fan turned on. Turn the heat off and the fan shut down after the temp dropped back down.
My guess is the guy who worked on the system last fall didn't actually wire the replacement fan relay correctly and the system is (again my guess) only turning on when the thermostatic switch says go, either manually or due to hot air. I don't know where the normal fan "ON" signal comes from (thermostat, AC compressor, and/or some part of the furnace system?). The fan does not turn on when I set the thermostat to FAN ONLY. I'm guessing that thermostatic switch is a back up to make sure the heat exchanger is cooled off after the thermostat tells the heat to turn off. I assume the fan relay (or what ever it is that takes a signal to turn on the fan) should be able to take more than one input.
Any suggestions what I should look for? I'm quite comfortable working on things like this in general but I've spent almost no time working on home HVACs so I really don't know how they are set up.
Thanks!
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