Hi, In the fall of '02 I purchased a 100+ year old 2story farmhouse (< 2000sq ft) for weekends that had been mostly rehab'd. The house has 2 newer high-eff (York PD2* Diamond furnaces and questionable insulation(different issue).
Last winter we didn't have any problems, but a few weeks ago we had to replace the hot surface igniter in 1 furnace. The technician remarked about excessive condensation and thought it was the cause.
Now, this weekend we can only keep 1 furnace running at a time. Turn them both on, the both blow cool air, turn furnace A off, the other works fine. Turn it off and the other works fine. Being these are newer furnaces we suspect electronic controls and numerous safety sensors.- potentially a flu pressure sensor.
The chimney runs thru the house off-center from cellar to the attic where it angles to exit the center ridge of the roof. It’s probably a run of about 40-50'. There is no chimney cap, but we know it's needed. The furnaces are on separate thermostats (1st floor & 2nd floor), but vent to the same chimney.
We are wondering if it’s possible that a clogged/dirty chimney could cause enough back pressure to cause a switch off(if there is a switch).
Any thoughts or guidance would be helpful.
Thanks
Cheers!
Doug
Last winter we didn't have any problems, but a few weeks ago we had to replace the hot surface igniter in 1 furnace. The technician remarked about excessive condensation and thought it was the cause.
Now, this weekend we can only keep 1 furnace running at a time. Turn them both on, the both blow cool air, turn furnace A off, the other works fine. Turn it off and the other works fine. Being these are newer furnaces we suspect electronic controls and numerous safety sensors.- potentially a flu pressure sensor.
The chimney runs thru the house off-center from cellar to the attic where it angles to exit the center ridge of the roof. It’s probably a run of about 40-50'. There is no chimney cap, but we know it's needed. The furnaces are on separate thermostats (1st floor & 2nd floor), but vent to the same chimney.
We are wondering if it’s possible that a clogged/dirty chimney could cause enough back pressure to cause a switch off(if there is a switch).
Any thoughts or guidance would be helpful.
Thanks
Cheers!
Doug
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