Jump to content
LIMITED TIME OFFER: Get up to $100 off tuition for Master Samurai Tech courses through November 30th ×
Click here to check out this guide

FAQs | Repair Videos | Academy | Newsletter | Contact


Search the Community

Showing results for tags 'flue'.

  • Search By Tags

    Type tags separated by commas.
  • Search By Author

Content Type


Forums

  • Appliantology Welcome Center
    • Site Orientation
    • Announcements
  • Professional Appliance Technician Forums
    • Appliance Repair Tech Forum
    • Master Samurai Tech Workshops
    • Samurai's Appliance Repair Video Classroom
    • Samurai’s Appliance Puzzles
    • The Dojo
  • Appliance Service Manual Requests
    • Appliance Service Manual Requests Forum
  • Appliance Repair Trade Resources
    • Looking for a Tech
    • Looking for a Job
    • Appliance Repair B2B Resources
  • DIYer Appliance Repair Forums
    • DIY Appliance Repair Help
    • Appliance Haikus

Blogs

  • Samurai Appliance Repair Man's Blog
  • kdog's Blog
  • Mrs. Samurai's Kitchen
  • DurhamAppliance's Blog
  • applianceman97's Blog
  • LI-NY Tech's Blog
  • tpoindexter's Blog
  • Eugene's blog about stores, fixing, life, and more!
  • Appliance Repair Tech Tips
  • Koi Guy's Amazing Compendium of Timeless Appliantological Wisdom
  • Rhubarb Tau's Sloggy Vlog Blog Bog

Categories

  • Appliance Repair Manual Stash Access File®
  • Appliance Repair Manual Pot Luck Supper

Find results in...

Find results that contain...


Date Created

  • Start

    End


Last Updated

  • Start

    End


Filter by number of...

Found 1 result

  1. Hi all, been awhile since I've been on here but I've got one for the experts on "furnace-tology". Strong, gusty 45mph winds typical for Fall here have been messing with my induced draft blower vacuum signal to the pressure switch, especially the cyclonic nature of said winds this year. Shuts the furnace down prematurely when alternating positive/negative pressure waves in the flue mess with the blower vacuum signal from gusts blasting across the furnace exhaust flue outlet above the roofline. Flue terminates approximately 22 feet above the ground, through the garage roof, along the split level exterior wall, through the adjacent eave of the attached main house terminating about 3 feet above the roofline. PVC 2.5 inch diameter. Result: the pressure switch diaphram plunger taps the microswitch toggle just slightly enough to open the circuit making the furnace controller think the draft blower has failed--result, premature flame shutdown and begin another inefficient heating cycle. The flue top has a convex rain cap of course. Draft blower is new last winter. Pressure switch vacuum tests prove ok for possible torn diaphram. Pressure microswitch continuity tests check ok at microswitch. I relocated the pressure switch closer to the draft blower with a much shorter hose a week ago when the wind was blowing thinking that would help with a stronger vacuum signal but particularly bad winds this weekend proved that futile. Tonight it’s calm here for the first time in 4 days and the furnace is completing heating cycles normally. I’m now wondering what I can do to keep gusts from creating pressure waves down the flue or wind-capping the flue. Does anybody know of a flue-cap product for just such a condition? Is there a flue cap made specifically for wind problems like this?
×
×
  • Create New...