gahrajmahal
Well-known member
Below Zero and your furnace stops working?
Before you call your repairman there are a couple of things you can check out. I happened to be home today, enjoying my fireplace and surfing the web when I noticed it seemed to be cold in the room. My furnace is 10+ years old, gas, forced air and is of the newer computer controlled energy saver kind. You know the one with the PVC intake and exhaust outside on the side of the house.
Going upstairs I checked the thermostat first. It was set to 68 F. but registered 61 F. on the digital readout. You know all those digital thermostats use a battery, typically 9 volt, so I will change that in a bit even though the thermostat seems to be working.
Going downstairs I checked to see if the furnace was running and it was not. The first thing I did was to check the ON/OFF switch. Mine was ON, but my son wasted $50 bucks with a service call to our furnace guy Tony. Their ironing board fell against their furnace and bumped the switch to OFF. Tony was pretty good about not razzing him too much. So, check your switch!!
I turned my switch OFF, waited 30 seconds then turned it back ON. My furnace started up but no sound of the spark igniter or the whoosh from the flame starting. Most computer controlled furnaces take a long time to cycle prior to lighting. I pulled off the access panel on the front of the furnace and looked for any obvious reset buttons, but found none. So, approximately 4 minutes later I hear that reassuring whoosh and looking into the viewing window I saw that beautiful blue flame.
If you are reading this and your furnace is working, take some time along with your loved ones to inspect your furnace and identify the OFF / ON switch, how to remove the cover, identify any reset switches and where the viewing window is. It's nicer to do this when it's working.
So, now to get bundled up, go outside and inspect what I believe to be the culprit of my stopped furnace. It is -5 F. outside, so everything is pretty frozen. Turning the corner of the house I immediately find what I expected. One of the pipes for the furnace was frozen and mostly blocked with frost and ice.
The reason I had suspected this is when Tony originally installed this furnace many years ago, he covered the intake PVC pipe with 1/4 galvanized hardware cloth. The wire cloth caught the snow and easily froze over several times. I had replaced the hardware cloth with this stainless floor drain and have never had the problem since. So I guess it has just not gotten cold enough.
I simply popped out the stainless cover and I will replace it once the temperatures go up a bit.
Another addition I have made to my furnace to assure a warm home if the power goes out comes from a Garage Journal post I read concerning a Transfer Switch. I had purchased a Harbor Freight generator during a summer power outage and was wondering if it could power my gas furnace. The post verified that it could but stressed the importance of not feeding power back to your panel by having a transfer switch wired in. This allows you to run a long extension cord (12 ga.) from your generator to the transfer switch. Just flip the switch and your furnace will have 110 volt power to run just like normal but isolates it from the rest of the house. So the rest of the house still won't have any power, but the furnace will run and the pipes wont freeze.
Feel free to add any additional tips to the post. I am not endorsing the transfer switch, it's safety or other liability. I am just informing you all about what may help you keep a warm home during this cold winter.
Edit; Sorry for the BIG photos. I took the pictures on the wrong setting and PhotoBucket did not seem to resize them correctly
Before you call your repairman there are a couple of things you can check out. I happened to be home today, enjoying my fireplace and surfing the web when I noticed it seemed to be cold in the room. My furnace is 10+ years old, gas, forced air and is of the newer computer controlled energy saver kind. You know the one with the PVC intake and exhaust outside on the side of the house.
Going upstairs I checked the thermostat first. It was set to 68 F. but registered 61 F. on the digital readout. You know all those digital thermostats use a battery, typically 9 volt, so I will change that in a bit even though the thermostat seems to be working.
Going downstairs I checked to see if the furnace was running and it was not. The first thing I did was to check the ON/OFF switch. Mine was ON, but my son wasted $50 bucks with a service call to our furnace guy Tony. Their ironing board fell against their furnace and bumped the switch to OFF. Tony was pretty good about not razzing him too much. So, check your switch!!
I turned my switch OFF, waited 30 seconds then turned it back ON. My furnace started up but no sound of the spark igniter or the whoosh from the flame starting. Most computer controlled furnaces take a long time to cycle prior to lighting. I pulled off the access panel on the front of the furnace and looked for any obvious reset buttons, but found none. So, approximately 4 minutes later I hear that reassuring whoosh and looking into the viewing window I saw that beautiful blue flame.
If you are reading this and your furnace is working, take some time along with your loved ones to inspect your furnace and identify the OFF / ON switch, how to remove the cover, identify any reset switches and where the viewing window is. It's nicer to do this when it's working.
So, now to get bundled up, go outside and inspect what I believe to be the culprit of my stopped furnace. It is -5 F. outside, so everything is pretty frozen. Turning the corner of the house I immediately find what I expected. One of the pipes for the furnace was frozen and mostly blocked with frost and ice.
The reason I had suspected this is when Tony originally installed this furnace many years ago, he covered the intake PVC pipe with 1/4 galvanized hardware cloth. The wire cloth caught the snow and easily froze over several times. I had replaced the hardware cloth with this stainless floor drain and have never had the problem since. So I guess it has just not gotten cold enough.
I simply popped out the stainless cover and I will replace it once the temperatures go up a bit.
Another addition I have made to my furnace to assure a warm home if the power goes out comes from a Garage Journal post I read concerning a Transfer Switch. I had purchased a Harbor Freight generator during a summer power outage and was wondering if it could power my gas furnace. The post verified that it could but stressed the importance of not feeding power back to your panel by having a transfer switch wired in. This allows you to run a long extension cord (12 ga.) from your generator to the transfer switch. Just flip the switch and your furnace will have 110 volt power to run just like normal but isolates it from the rest of the house. So the rest of the house still won't have any power, but the furnace will run and the pipes wont freeze.
Feel free to add any additional tips to the post. I am not endorsing the transfer switch, it's safety or other liability. I am just informing you all about what may help you keep a warm home during this cold winter.
Edit; Sorry for the BIG photos. I took the pictures on the wrong setting and PhotoBucket did not seem to resize them correctly
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