Jump to content
Click here to check out this guide

FAQs | Repair Videos | Academy | Newsletter | Contact


DISCLOSURE: We may earn a commission when you use one of our coupons/links to make a purchase.
  • Upcoming Events

    • 27 April 2024 02:00 PM Until 03:00 PM
      5  
      All Appliantology tech members are invited to join in this workshop on all things Appliantological. 
      We have a special session planned for this one. Instead of the usual Show 'n Tell on a technical topic, we're going to post tech sheets in the comments to this Calendar Event (scroll down to see what's posted so far) and ask specific questions that can only be answered by reading the tech sheet. If you at least try to answer the questions beforehand, you'll get a lot more out of it. The tech sheet and the questions are posted in the comments section below.
      Your mission, if you should choose to accept it, is to check out the questions for each one and try to answer them ahead of time. Then come to the Dojo to see how well you did! 
      Who: This workshop is only available to tech members at Appliantology.
      When: Saturday, April 27 @10:00 AM Eastern Time.
      Where: Online via Zoom
      How:
      Click here to go to the forum topic with the registration link. If you're interested, register now. Arrive a couple minutes early to make sure your connection is working. Set a reminder for yourself for this workshop so you don’t miss it.  And check out past workshops here: https://appliantology.org/announcement/33-webinar-recordings-index-page/

Gotta say thanks


bigrigfixer

Recommended Posts

Our blower fan motor packed it in last week, and after getting help from you guys for fixing my dryer last year, I figured I could take on the furnace too.  So...

Pull the fan out, after almost shocking myself because of flipping the wrong breaker.  Get the motor out of the fan.  Packed full of dust.  So off to Home Depot we go.  (This was Sunday, no furnace shops open.)  As luck would have it, there was a Trane rep in the HVAC aisle.  I asked him where I could find one of these (showing him the motor from a Lennox furnace) to which he replied "not here, and not anywhere on a Sunday."

But the most excellent part was how he explained to me what to do to bring my motor back to life.  Oil it, oil it, oil it.  Take two wires and stick them into a wall outlet.  Then oil it some more.  Keep working the thing until it spun freely.  He said he brought back to life many a motor this way.

So, to the anonymous Trane rep at Home Depot in Langley BC on Sunday, thank you for saving my wife and I a chunk of money on a new motor, and possibly an expensive service call, by having us buy a $3.29 bottle of oil instead.

And thank you other guys on here, for giving me the confidence to do the job after helping me fix my dryer last year.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

  • Replies 9
  • Created
  • Last Reply

Yeah, that stuff.  SAE 20, with a picture of a motor on it.  The Trane guy said it would be good.

Why?  What should I have used?  Or use next time when I service it?

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Never seen sae 20 3-1 oil locally. If it's the stuff in a red can it's good for barn doors and gate hinges. If it's something different you may be ok.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Gotta drive a whole county away to get to a Home Depot or Lowes. If I go that far I have the family with me.So, I don't go to those places very often.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

[user=27]edwardh1[/user] wrote:

lowes and home depot sell it has a motor pix on the front of the can

Yeah, that's the stuff I got.

And I do plan on servicing the thing more frequently than once a year now that the motor is on it's last legs.  Maybe every 6 months.

Ah, the joys of being a first time homeowner.  Don't know the service history of nothing in the house.

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.


×
×
  • Create New...