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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Furnace Sequence of Operation - Short 137

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 28 December 2021

⏱️ 7 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, Bryan goes over the basic gas furnace sequence of operations. There are a few variations, but the sequence of operations tends to stay consistent across most furnace types.

First, a W call from the thermostat calls for heat. The circuit board will then assess the safeties to see if it can bring on the heat without causing flame rollout or other dangerous conditions. If the safety switches are all closed, then the furnace can bring on the heat. However, in some cases, the induced draft motor may come on first in some 80% furnaces. There needs to be a small negative pressure in the induced draft motor housing. To confirm that we have that pressure, a pressure switch will close under the right conditions.

Then, ignition begins. In most cases, we use intermittent-spark ignition (ISI) or hot-surface ignition (HSI). It takes some time for these methods to light the pilot, which then lights the main burner. After that, the gas valve opens to fuel the burner. On an ISI system, that's about it until the blower comes on. However, once the main burner opens on an HSI system, a flame sensing rod can verify if you have a flame on that burner. There is a blower delay that prevents the blower from coming on and blowing a bunch of air that hasn't yet been heated.

After that, the blower delay ends, and the blower comes on. Then, the furnace shuts off when the W call ends. Then the blower continues running for a little bit before turning off.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Well, well well, look who showed up. It's you on the HVAC school

0:07.5

podcast. Actually not on it, you're just listening to it, but just pretend that

0:10.9

you and I are in a room, a very small room,

0:13.2

of uncomfortably small room, because that's what my studio is,

0:15.5

and you're sitting here, and I'm just telling this just to you.

0:18.6

Actually, that's kind of awkward, so don't do that.

0:21.4

But today we are gonna talk talk about Furnace Sequence of Operations.

0:25.2

Surprisingly, haven't actually talked about this on a short episode before. It's pretty quick.

0:29.4

We'll go through it. Soup to nuts. At least, the basics.

0:32.3

Anyway, before we do that, let's hear it, soup to nuts, at least the basics.

0:33.0

Anyway, before we do that, let's hear from our great sponsors.

0:37.0

Refrigeration Technologies at refrigidect.com, carrier and carrier.com, Speed Clean and Speed Clean. dot com.

0:43.0

Speed clean and speed clean

0:45.0

great folks they make a lot of really excellent purpose built tools for

0:49.3

cleaning the mini split bib kit is an excellent way to clean duckless systems or mini-splits.

0:55.0

Both the blower wheel and the evaporator coil can be cleaned by placing the bib kit

0:59.2

securely underneath your high wall air handlers.

1:02.8

Find out more, go to speed clean.com.

1:05.4

Navac and Navac Global.

1:07.6

Navac makes a lot of excellent products.

1:10.1

If you haven't taken a look at the NEF 6LM, it's a new battery-powered flaring tool, single-hand operation, really

1:17.6

revolutionary in terms of making great flares every time.

...

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