Our control board replacement guide will help you to diagnose and replace (when necessary) your furnace control. There are basically two types of gas furnace control boards.

The first type are simple ignition controls which control the gas valve, the ignitor (either a spark generator or hot surface ignitor), and a flame sensing circuit. These controls are more common on older less efficient units.

The other type is usually referred to as an integrated furnace control. These controls perform the same functions as the ignition control but also control the furnace blower in both the air conditioning and heating modes as well as providing onboard diagnostics.

**NOTE** ONLY YOU CAN ASSESS YOUR ABILITY TO PERFORM THIS TASK. THIS GUIDE CANNOT COVER EVERY POSSIBLE SITUATION.

The integrated furnace control is the heart of the furnace. Most of them have the same basic sequence of operations that they control. It is critical to know what the control is supposed to do so that you can tell that it is operating properly.

**NOTE** ONLY YOU CAN ASSESS YOUR ABILITY TO PERFORM THIS TASK. THIS GUIDE CANNOT COVER EVERY POSSIBLE SITUATION.

The integrated furnace control is the heart of the furnace. Most of them have the same basic sequence of operations that they control. It is critical to know what the control is supposed to do so that you can tell that it is operating properly.

On a call for heat, they first start the induced draft motor (if the furnace has one). Then, the inducer causes a pressure switch to close. The control then either ignites the pilot, starts the direct spark ignitor, or starts the warmup of the hot surface ignitor.

After the pilot is lit and verified or the hot surface ignitor is warmed up (glowing bright yellow), the gas valve is energized. At the same time a timer begins to ensure that the burners were lit. In most cases a separate flame sensor proves that the burners are lit.

After the burners are lit, a timer starts and energizes the furnace blower after the set delay.

See the original post here:
Furnace Control Board Replacement, A Homeowner's Guide

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December 12, 2013 at 4:28 pm by Mr HomeBuilder
Category: HVAC replacements