โFeb-29-2016 04:01 AM
โMar-19-2016 05:45 AM
"RELAY" description from the furnace manual wrote:
This component is commonly referred to as a time delay relay. The same relay is used on the 7900, 8500 and 8900 series furnaces.
FUNCTION - The relay has one primary function.
-to purge the plenum of heat and the chamber of any unburnt gases after each heating cycle.
OPERATION - The motor voltage path of relay is normally open. There should always be voltage from the circuit breaker to the relay terminal of the circuit breaker. There should always be continuity between the thermostat terminal connection and ground terminal connection or the relay.
Only when the thermostat contacts are closed is voltage supplied to the thermostat terminal of the relay. This voltage heats a coil in the relay body. In approximately 20 seconds this heated coil causes a bimetal disc to close. Voltage now passes through the relay and on to the motor, which in turn should allow the furnace to ignite and start a heating cycle.
When a heating cycle is complete, the contacts of the thermostat open and voltage ceases to the heater coil of the relay. In approximately 45 - 90 seconds, the heater coil cools down, the bi-metal disc opens and voltage ceases to the motor as well.
โMar-19-2016 03:20 AM
DFord wrote:
OregonTravelers, I given you several suggestions to test and troubleshoot and never heard you cared to follow any of them. Instead you chose to throw more parts at it. You're on your own.
โMar-18-2016 07:26 PM
โMar-18-2016 05:34 PM
OregonTravelers wrote:
Chris
You may be correct about the weak breaker, but I will have to challenge you about soldering never being done at the factory. I purchased this coach new in 2005, The only soldering that has been done on the circuit breaker was done to repair a wire solder that had worked loose because of a poor soldering job at the factory. In addition there are approximately 25 circuit breakers ranging from 7 amps to 15 amps on the panel in a compartment in the coach. ALL of the wires are soldered to the various circuit breakers.
โMar-18-2016 03:55 PM
โMar-18-2016 03:22 PM
OregonTravelers wrote:Chris Bryant wrote:OregonTravelers wrote:
OK Chris. The dead horse has been whipped. Finally had the blower motor checked. The motor draws 7 amps. Exactly what it is rated to draw. Furnace still cycling on and off.
OK- follow along. If it is drawing 7 amps, and the 15 amp breaker is tripping, the breaker is bad- likely cutting voltage through it. Replace it.
This is why you test things, rather than guess and throw parts.
On edit- you don't even have to buy a part to check this- just pull the leads off the breaker and hook a 15 amp blade fuse in place- the connectors will fit fine.
OK, but please explain to me how the circuit breaker causes the furnace to cycle on and off? The furnace starts, heats to the temperature on the thermostat, then furnace shut of and the fan continues to run for a short while, then everything stops. After a few seconds the fan starts, then the furnace starts and runs for a few seconds. Then the furnace shuts down, the fan runs for a few more seconds then everything turns off. Then the cycle starts all over again. This cycling happens three or four times and then the circuit breaker trips.
Don't understand how the circuit breaker would cause this.
Explain please.
The other issue is that the wires are soldered on to the circuit breaker.
Carl
โMar-18-2016 01:52 PM
Chris Bryant wrote:OregonTravelers wrote:
OK Chris. The dead horse has been whipped. Finally had the blower motor checked. The motor draws 7 amps. Exactly what it is rated to draw. Furnace still cycling on and off.
OK- follow along. If it is drawing 7 amps, and the 15 amp breaker is tripping, the breaker is bad- likely cutting voltage through it. Replace it.
This is why you test things, rather than guess and throw parts.
On edit- you don't even have to buy a part to check this- just pull the leads off the breaker and hook a 15 amp blade fuse in place- the connectors will fit fine.
โMar-18-2016 05:00 AM
OregonTravelers wrote:
OK Chris. The dead horse has been whipped. Finally had the blower motor checked. The motor draws 7 amps. Exactly what it is rated to draw. Furnace still cycling on and off.
โMar-18-2016 04:52 AM
โMar-18-2016 04:47 AM
Chris Bryant wrote:
At the risk of....
There are many ways a bad motor can cause cycling- in addition to what Doug pointed out, a 15 amp draw will pull the voltage down, and can easily pull it down far enough that the time delay relay will disengage, as well as the electronics dropping out.
We know that the motor has problems- a quick check of the current draw would verify that. Why throw parts at a furnace before you fix the main problem?
โMar-09-2016 09:58 AM
โMar-09-2016 09:23 AM
โMar-09-2016 07:51 AM
โMar-09-2016 04:59 AM