Forum Discussion
aruba5er
Apr 24, 2014Explorer
CO is differant from Propane and I doubt that the propane detector can detect CO Rather than shutting down the furnace and gas they ( the firemen) should have used their CO detector to pin point the problem. I would bet that you have a broken heat exchanger in the furnace. AND any Rv furnace I have seen uses one motor and has a double ended shaft to power the blades. One for the heat and the other for exhust. Did he really put in a new motor? I would look hard at the heat exchanger. Don't forget CO is orderless so you can't smell it. And CO is lighter than air so you want a detector near the ceiling. Propane at the floor
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