The DU Lounge
Related: Culture Forums, Support ForumsIf you have a gas furnace, do this today
Gas furnaces dont run their burners all the time, just when they need to produce heat. When the thermostat commands them to make heat, first an igniter - an electric heating element or maybe a spark producer - and the blower turns on. When conditions are right to light a stream of gas then the gas valve opens to allow fuel into the chamber, and it is lit. The Igniter shuts off then and gas flows until the thermostat tells the furnace to stop making heat.
The furnace needs to know if the gas is burning - if it isnt and it keeps flowing your furnace could explode and burn your house down - so there is a metal rod called a flame sensor in the path of the burner flame. Theres usually also an optical sensor in there so the furnace can see the flame, but the rod will always be there. If the rod gets crudded up with soot, dust, whatever, it cant sense and your furnace wont work.
You COULD pay a heating company a couple hundred dollars to come out and clean this, but its something anyone can do. This is how.
You will need a Phillips screwdriver to open the furnace cover, a 1/4 nut driver to take the flame sensor out, a green scouring pad to clean it, and a damp cloth to clean the face of the optical sensor.
Turn the furnace off at the breaker panel and remove the cover. Its the one at the bottom of the furnace. There are normally two screws holding it on and therell be a placard above it telling you youre gonna die if you run the furnace with it off. Put the screws somewhere safe - if you have a magnetic bowl use that - and lift off the cover.
Look at the burner chamber and youll see the flame sensor. Its a metal rod about three inches long with a wire coming out the top of it. Pull off the wire, undo the one screw holding it in with the nut driver and lift it out.
Gently scrub the rod with the scouring pad until any soot or debris is gone.
Reinstall the rod and hook the wire back up.
Gently wipe off the lens on the optical sensor. You can do this with it still installed.
Reinstall the cover and turn the furnace back on at the panel.
Its best to do this while the furnace is still able to make heat, so you dont come home from work at 3 am to a cold house.
ProfessorGAC
(70,894 posts)I don't know about all hearing systems, but if our heater (we have circulating hot water heat) has no flame, the gas valve shuts.
It's on a timer. The valve opens, the igniter sparks, and within a few seconds the current should pass through the ions in the flame to close the circuit.
If that current isn't sensed, it shuts the valve, so there is no gas flowing.
Hence, our system wouldn't blow up, but it would be useless.
Our system is designed and built by Crown Boiler. I don't know if other brands work that way.
But, you are doing a good service to fellow DUers.
question everything
(49,228 posts)Not all are DIY so have to rely on service people..
But thanks for the idea
SWBTATTReg
(24,442 posts)something happening inadvertently. Better to hire an expert to do the maint., cleaning, and check OTHER things too, while they're there. We get them here at the house twice a year for under $10 each visit, give or take. It's well worth it. We have had the same furnace people for years and years. And, if any issues caused by them, they won't charge us for the follow-up visit (forgot once to hook up a wire back up).