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furnace fan

russ1102
Explorer
Explorer
Put my fifth wheel away for the winter and the furnace fan won't shut off. No propane on, just battery. Any ideas what the cause might be?
19 REPLIES 19

dougrainer
Nomad
Nomad
trailrider wrote:
dougrainer wrote:
mchero wrote:
The Hi limit switch on my Atwood furnace is normally CLOSED, opens when overtemp condition.
From the Atwood service manual;
The limit switch is an in line safety device which protects
the furnace from any over heating conditions. The
contacts in the limit switch open at a given temperature
setting, shutting off power to the valve


Once the burner shuts off, the fan continues to run to cool the chamber down. Once the Limit closes, the fan will shut off. This can happen from normal operation when the burner chamber gets too hot, but the wall tstat has been satisfied. The wall tstat if still calling for heat, the Limit will open if the chamber gets too hot and will then close again once the chamber is cooled down and the burner will then come back on. If you have reached the tstat setting , the odds are the Limit is now OPEN from the chamber heat and will run the fan until the chamber cools down enough to close the limit switch. Doug


Again, we don't even know the make and model of the furnace in question. BUT: The Atwood Service Manual description of high temp limit switch function is correct for any Atwood or Suburban furnace made in the last 20 or 30 years. The high temp limit switch has NOTHING to do with the fan operation in these furnaces. That is controlled by the time delay relay on earlier furnaces or a relay on the circuit board on newer furnaces.

Some really old furnaces had a bi metal switch that allowed the fan to run long enough to cool down the furnace.


You are correct about not posting about brand/ model. BUT, the Hi limit DOES affect the fan operation. IF the Hi Limit has been tripped(open), then after burner shut down and tstat interior temp has been met, the FAN WILL run until the chamber cools down enough to close the Hi Limit switch. Once that happens, the fan shuts OFF. The logic in the Ignition module controls this. Doug

2112
Explorer II
Explorer II
mchero wrote:
**snip**
I would like to thank Doug as well as the others for their contributions to these rv forums.
**snip**
I keep a notepad in my desk drawer. When Doug or Old_Biscuit speak, I write it down. I include title, topic, date posted, by whom, and final solution, if disclosed. I'm patiently waiting for this solution.

There is a wealth of knowledge on this forum but it can be difficult sometimes to root it out.

Thank You to all that contribute.
2011 Ford F-150 EcoBoost SuperCab Max Tow, 2084# Payload, 11,300# Tow,
Timbrens
2013 KZ Durango 2857

mchero
Explorer
Explorer
Trailrider

Both Doug and myself are very aware
that the OP did not state that his furnace was an Atwood.

ZRuss, the OP joined this forum back 2004. Perhaps, someday he will return to this post and let us all know what model furnace he has.

Atwood or not, interesting information being passed around. I have done my own work on my Discovery and many other rv's. Not as much as Doug and some others.

Again

I would like to thank Doug as well as the others for their contributions to these rv forums.

Waiting for the day Zruss posts the make of his furnace and of most importance, the outcome.
Robert McHenry
Currently, Henniker NH
07 Fleetwood Discovery 39V
1K Solar dieselrvowners.com
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Prior:1993 Pace Arrow 37' Diesel

trailrider
Explorer
Explorer
dougrainer wrote:
mchero wrote:
The Hi limit switch on my Atwood furnace is normally CLOSED, opens when overtemp condition.
From the Atwood service manual;
The limit switch is an in line safety device which protects
the furnace from any over heating conditions. The
contacts in the limit switch open at a given temperature
setting, shutting off power to the valve


Once the burner shuts off, the fan continues to run to cool the chamber down. Once the Limit closes, the fan will shut off. This can happen from normal operation when the burner chamber gets too hot, but the wall tstat has been satisfied. The wall tstat if still calling for heat, the Limit will open if the chamber gets too hot and will then close again once the chamber is cooled down and the burner will then come back on. If you have reached the tstat setting , the odds are the Limit is now OPEN from the chamber heat and will run the fan until the chamber cools down enough to close the limit switch. Doug


Again, we don't even know the make and model of the furnace in question. BUT: The Atwood Service Manual description of high temp limit switch function is correct for any Atwood or Suburban furnace made in the last 20 or 30 years. The high temp limit switch has NOTHING to do with the fan operation in these furnaces. That is controlled by the time delay relay on earlier furnaces or a relay on the circuit board on newer furnaces.

Some really old furnaces had a bi metal switch that allowed the fan to run long enough to cool down the furnace.
2020 Chevrolet Silverado 3500HD GAS!!!
1978 Chevrolet Silverado K20 4x4
2007 Komfort 277TS
2020 Sherco 300 SEF Factory
2018 Honda Rancher TRX420FA6
2017 Montesa 4RT260
2021 Honda CRF450X

mchero
Explorer
Explorer
Thanks Doug! Good to know!
Robert McHenry
Currently, Henniker NH
07 Fleetwood Discovery 39V
1K Solar dieselrvowners.com
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Prior:1993 Pace Arrow 37' Diesel

dougrainer
Nomad
Nomad
mchero wrote:
The Hi limit switch on my Atwood furnace is normally CLOSED, opens when overtemp condition.
From the Atwood service manual;
The limit switch is an in line safety device which protects
the furnace from any over heating conditions. The
contacts in the limit switch open at a given temperature
setting, shutting off power to the valve


Once the burner shuts off, the fan continues to run to cool the chamber down. Once the Limit closes, the fan will shut off. This can happen from normal operation when the burner chamber gets too hot, but the wall tstat has been satisfied. The wall tstat if still calling for heat, the Limit will open if the chamber gets too hot and will then close again once the chamber is cooled down and the burner will then come back on. If you have reached the tstat setting , the odds are the Limit is now OPEN from the chamber heat and will run the fan until the chamber cools down enough to close the limit switch. Doug

enblethen
Nomad
Nomad
Many posters indicate OP has an Atwood furnace. I have not seen where the OP has stated make and model of his furnace.

Bud
USAF Retired
Pace Arrow


2003 Chev Ice Road Tracker

Dusty_R
Explorer
Explorer
mchero wrote:
The Hi limit switch on my Atwood furnace is normally CLOSED, opens when overtemp condition.
From the Atwood service manual;
The limit switch is an in line safety device which protects
the furnace from any over heating conditions. The
contacts in the limit switch open at a given temperature
setting, shutting off power to the valve


And most likely it only turns of the burner, and lets the fan to keep running to cool down the heat exchanger.

Dusty

mchero
Explorer
Explorer
The Hi limit switch on my Atwood furnace is normally CLOSED, opens when overtemp condition.
From the Atwood service manual;
The limit switch is an in line safety device which protects
the furnace from any over heating conditions. The
contacts in the limit switch open at a given temperature
setting, shutting off power to the valve
Robert McHenry
Currently, Henniker NH
07 Fleetwood Discovery 39V
1K Solar dieselrvowners.com
2005 Jeep Grand Cherokee
Prior:1993 Pace Arrow 37' Diesel

wa8yxm
Explorer III
Explorer III
What the problem is is a laundry list.. What the SOLUTION list (During storage) is much shorter.
Option 1: Remove outside cover and if it's an Atwood furnace on top of the blower housing is what looks like a switch (it is a circuit breaker) Switch it OFF. Of course now the furnace is non-op till you turn it on.

Option 2: disconnect battery .. Physically lift the negative lead off the battery. (This also disables charging)


The laundry list OEM atwood board.
Bad T-Stat likely won't do it. same for T-stat wirings
Bad relay on control board
Bad other on control board
Short on control board wiring.

NOTE: There are two different patterns if lighting fails. Atwood shuts off fully and goes through the entire restart process.. Dinosaur board does NOT kill the blower.. SO if you have a dino board

Add the T-Stat and the T-Stat wires to the suspect list.
Home was where I park it. but alas the.
2005 Damon Intruder 377 Alas declared a total loss
after a semi "nicked" it. Still have the radios
Kenwood TS-2000, ICOM ID-5100, ID-51A+2, ID-880 REF030C most times

dougrainer
Nomad
Nomad
russ1102 wrote:
If I shut the furnace switch off and back on, would that unstick the limit switch? Or does it need a new limit switch.


No. The limit switch is a Bi Metal tab that just sticks. Doug

russ1102
Explorer
Explorer
If I shut the furnace switch off and back on, would that unstick the limit switch? Or does it need a new limit switch.

dougrainer
Nomad
Nomad
troubledwaters wrote:
Thermostat set to the fan on function?


RV furnace fan is NOT controlled by the wall tstat Fan setting. The usual cause of this is the Hi limit switch stuck closed. Another long shot would be water corrosion on the furnace circuit board fusing the fan relay. Doug

time2roll
Nomad
Nomad
I would just disconnect the battery and investigate when you pull it out of storage.
I assume it will turn out to be the furnace control board.