This 20 year old Plus 90 with a Chromotherm III stat is tripping the aux-resetable limit switch on the main blower housing after a few minutes. I reset the aux limit switch, set the thermostat, and supplied AC, I got a normal ignition cycle, and maybe 5 minutes of heat before the thing shut down again. The only thing I could find is the combustion draft inducer blower motor heating up, as in hot to touch the case. That motor is thermal protected/limited to 40 degrees C (104 F) ambient. The inducer blower motor did screech on cold start-up, so I drilled a very small hole in the end bushing cap and lubricated the bushing, first with a PTFE spray, then ATF oil. I got it through a 2 degree cycle of maybe 10 minutes to auto shut down after that, but that motor was too warm again for my liking. I probably need to get at the bushing on the blower end of the shaft and lubricate that if I'm going to use it, but may need to jerk it and ohm the windings. There is maybe 1/8 or more shaft end play.
The blower control card is good, ICM replacement, same condition with original type card (spare I cleaned the relay contacts on after replacement), inducer card is good too.
There was a recent windstorm with power outages, and the unit went cold and the blower stuck on shortly after the power came on. It worked normally until then. I came home and it was blowing cold air.
Ideas? Other conditions which might cause the inducer blower motor to overheat, like exchanger restrictions or ___? Can that alone trip the aux limit switch, or is it some other condition? Barking up the wrong tree? I'm basically flying blind and furnace illiterate, but know a bit about machines and electricity. Calling someone in is not an option right now.
Thanks,
Alley Oop
The blower control card is good, ICM replacement, same condition with original type card (spare I cleaned the relay contacts on after replacement), inducer card is good too.
There was a recent windstorm with power outages, and the unit went cold and the blower stuck on shortly after the power came on. It worked normally until then. I came home and it was blowing cold air.
Ideas? Other conditions which might cause the inducer blower motor to overheat, like exchanger restrictions or ___? Can that alone trip the aux limit switch, or is it some other condition? Barking up the wrong tree? I'm basically flying blind and furnace illiterate, but know a bit about machines and electricity. Calling someone in is not an option right now.
Thanks,
Alley Oop
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