You got that right!!!! And you made an excellent career choice because the young'ins are not interested in the trades like in the old days. It's a supply and demand economy, and you will do great by being great!.
A former pro technician here. You are correct. Craig and HVAC School and Ty Branaman are the most important videos out there. Literally priceless knowledge. It doesn't mean that anybody can just come up and wrench on this equipment though. Stuff happens irl that you need pro training to understand and deal with.
Absolutely an excellent and informational video. He covers 100% of what might be wrong. Again, a professional video that any novice can understand as well as the professional.
Only been in the field for about a year and a half, honestly these electric heat strips (in all electric and heat pumps) always gave me trouble. This video is great information for beginners like myself and hopefully a refresher for the seasoned techs.
Ive been in the trade since 1987 and have taught alot of beginners. I have to say that these videos are very imformative and I will recommend them to my newbies
I’m starting hvac/r certification in February so I’m studying as much as I can before I get there, as I’m the only girl enrolled so I hope to keep up 😁
Gender has no distinction in the trade. Put as much effort into learning and being a good student, and always remember to treat fellow tradespeople with respect. Good luck, and remember that above all else, electrical knowledge will always put you above the rest. I can never underestimate how important the electrical knowledge is.
Think I was in a controlled lab environment AKA school and they had Lennox and carrier, the Lennox seemed like it was built to pop you. I have little lady hands and still kept shocking my self on some sequencer spade connector
Facts seems as if the engineering gets worse instead of better. Like why would you put the sequencers , relays limits etc. Directly behind the circuit breaker lol.
@Devonte Baker ya aaon puts drives directly in front of relays and fuses on some model configurations. I hate it and it's actually very unsafe to work on them
Im fairly new to the trade and i live in south texas about 30 mins from the border and its barely getting cold so i dont have alot of experience with heat sequencers and this helped me out alot and i enjoy watching your videos, thank you so much sir!
Thank you for all your training and advice. You have helped me quite a few times. I've been in this field for a couple years, and still having trouble understanding the old carrier electric furnace 40AQ030. I've fixed one that was worked on by several hvac guys , I've put it back to original equipment and wiring and still having difficulty. Carrier has upgraded a 230v fan motor but with a little bit different wiring .
Thank you Bro , I have one unit i check all wiring are ok , the proplem is fan is running but the heater not working , when i shut off the fan the heater work
Can you explain why for some components it's better to test resistance rather then just continuity? I know for some components a resistance test gives you the value you need to verify its working properly but with other components like fuses continuity gives you that answer with an audible beep or silence. I guess what I asking is what components test better with resistance and what components test best with resistance?
You mentioned thermostat wiring done wrong. I was on a commercial job site that the apprentices wired the temporary power GFCIs wrong at the shop, and kept tripping breakers when plugging anything into them. I'm not an electrician, but I do know polarity on AC power. At work, they have a sign above the cart for green cones used when servicing MCC panels for the arc zone, and among other things, it says that they are only to be used by "electrictians". I mentioned that to one of the mechanics there, and they said that they now know why the cones weren't being used. No one in the employ of the company has that title. I told the mechanic that this must be referring to some professional that is both a magician and works with electric. What a typo.😀
Hi, you didn't create a book for the heating electric element and relays ?, on how they are powered, I seen your video, excellent, I would like yo buy your book on the electric heating, already bought the air conditioning book
The little popper breaker is rated at 5 A, the 30 VA transformer is good for approximately 1.25 A, won’t the transformers smoke before the 5A little popper breaker opens?
Hi i been following your videos and i have a question about the common wire .how it works? what it does ?why the system doesn't work without it. Thanks
Was that heat kit flipped to match the specified air flow direction? I only ask since the lettering on all the components is upside-down. Is this common practice so that heat kits can be used on both up and down draft air handlers?
I have a lennox system where the transformer in the air handler trips every time heat is called. The system comes on fine with ac and fan only but when it calls for heat the transformer trips pretty much immediately. Any thoughts what it could be or what i should check first? I appreciate any help in advance as winter is coming 🥶 and the family needs the heater.
Hi Craig, great training and videos. I purchased your book and got a lot out of that too. However, I have a problem that is bewildering and hoping for some advice from you. Tempstar FCX6000C AH with PSC fan motor that won't turn off. It is not equipped with a Sequencer but has an Overtemp Limit switch that isn't tripped. HP unit is TCH260AKA1 with demand defrost board. Pulled TStat, no joy. Checked 24V wires for shorts and continuity to Tstat and HP. All ok. Checked signals to pins on AH Fan Control Board and discovered Y from HP has ~18V on it continuously in relation to C terminal. With all signal wires disconnected except for R, C and Y wires from HP, the AH fan turns on - removing Y from AH Y terminal causes fan to turn off after normal delay. I don't know if that voltage is what the demand defrost board normally sends to AH during defrost cycle to turn AH fan on. So the question is, should I suspect Demand Defrost board on HP or Fan control board on AH? I loath throwing parts at anything. I will check the defrost cycle test function and note if the unit functions normally. I'll also check the condenser coil defrost sensor. Your help is greatly appreciated.
About the DC relays. Johnson Controls / UPG used 28v coil DC relays WITHOUT a rectifier in some of their air handlers around the 2010s. They were sending 24v AC to the relay coil. Can someone explain why (and for that matter how AC voltage works on a DC coil)?
hey Craig when you make your own testing set up like w a transformer . and have an inline fuse set up ... what size fuse do you use w that ? i want to make my own lil trouble shooting set up .. I picked up a 10/30 output transformer w a 110v input .. I added a plug to it abd 24v t stat wire w that online fuse holder but wasn't sure what's besr fuses to use for trouble shooting 24 v components.. is. a 3 am fuse good or what do you recommend... also I will be ordering your new book soon on the mini splits
Hey, you only have to remove 1 wire on each component to check the fuses and hi-temp limit switches!! Why potentially loosen more spade connectors and create an intermittent that wasn't there originally than necessary?!?
He could've done it for any number of reasons. He could've done it because he gets slightly nervous when recording his self. He could've done it because he has obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), and everything has to be done in certain multiples, etc. It is insignificant to question one who is demonstrating something with the sole purpose of educating others, just so as long as the principle itself is understood.
I'll just use your multimeter set the voltage AC disconnect your low voltage leads from the Transformer and put your probes on those connectors with the unit powered up you should read 24 plus volts ac. You can also do a continuity test with no voltage and the wires disconnected from the Transformer to see if the windings are broken internally.
Hope this helps. Continuity, as in a closed circuit, should read 0.0 ohms (or close to it). If the ohm reading is much higher, as in 0.5, first check your meter's reading by just touching the two test leads together. If you still have a reading like 0.5, correct the problem with your meter. If your meter reads 0.0 lead to lead, but the component reads higher, it can be pitting on the contacts of the component, or just a poor connection of your test leads to the component.
What could be the problem if you have an electric furnace and oncall for heat the heat strips turn up but the blower fan which is controlled by fan relay does not. Fan only comes on if you turn the thermostat fan in the on position but not auto when calling for heat
Question! Does a 6 pin General purpose relay supply the strips with 24 volts? The unit does not have a board. I'm trying to trace a short down and it's difficult. Im getting 24 volts on every thermostat wire but the heat wires. The heat strips have a board which is CNT06195. I've changed it, but I'm still not getting the voltage I need to the heat wire. Before I changed the board, the heat strips would cycle on and off with just 13 volts. Now that I've changed the board with CNT06194 nothing comes on in heat mode , now I'm getting 16 volts. Part of the heat strips would stay on for 7 seconds and go off. Help I'm puzzled!!!! This is a trane. GAM2A0c48s41sba. Thanks
The only impact of a heat pump on the electric heat strips is that the defrost board should energize W to run the electric strips during defrost. My heat pump got wired with the W2 on an input terminal on the defrost board instead of the output so wasn't being energized.
Your multimeter it’s very complicated I don’t understand it. You should have a common meter on your instructional videos so we can see where to set our meters and what you are talking about. What option is electrical resistance on my meter??🤷♂️🤷♂️
This education is very important to brush up our knowledge. But hopefully the death warning will prevent unknowledgeable people from trying this... Homeowners and such. One wrong move and bam, your life is over. I work on these, at times, like I'm working with live ammo or bombs 😂
It gets even worse when you have the communicating kind and the AVC thinks heat relays are closed when they are open and because of that it locks out the AC😂 Talk about scratching your head.
Most people don’t have the time, or the interest, or the mechanical or electrical ability to do this. They would rather watch movies or music videos or play games or sports or spend time with family or work at their jobs. Everyday I go to work I pass the fitness center and there are 50 cars in the parking lot.
Ima a new tech fresh outta school. This is the best channel out there
You got that right!!!! And you made an excellent career choice because the young'ins are not interested in the trades like in the old days. It's a supply and demand economy, and you will do great by being great!.
A former pro technician here. You are correct. Craig and HVAC School and Ty Branaman are the most important videos out there. Literally priceless knowledge. It doesn't mean that anybody can just come up and wrench on this equipment though. Stuff happens irl that you need pro training to understand and deal with.
Excellent choice, the more you like it the more enjoyable it becomes and the reward it's really good!
So when breaker is on it should read 24 amps correct? And that should feed to the relay
One of the best HVAC instructor ever
Absolutely an excellent and informational video. He covers 100% of what might be wrong.
Again, a professional video that any novice can understand as well as the professional.
Only been in the field for about a year and a half, honestly these electric heat strips (in all electric and heat pumps) always gave me trouble. This video is great information for beginners like myself and hopefully a refresher for the seasoned techs.
Fr been in the trade about the same amount I’ll take straight ac and gas over a heat pump every time
Ive been in the trade since 1987 and have taught alot of beginners. I have to say that these videos are very imformative and I will recommend them to my newbies
When does everything start to click? I've been an apprentice for 5 months and it still seems very complicated for me.
Wonderful video for older heat pumps. Exactly what I was looking for.
Glad it was helpful!
How old is old? I have one Trane heat pump around 12 yrs old.
Been watching several channels, you're is by far my favorite. Thanks for taking the time to spread the knowledge.
Great explanation of an air handler. Thanks for sharing.
Thank you for this. You've clarified a lot of different questions I've had for a while in this video. Seriously thank you!
Thanks for watching! I'm glad my video was helpful to you!!
I’m starting hvac/r certification in February so I’m studying as much as I can before I get there, as I’m the only girl enrolled so I hope to keep up 😁
Gender has no distinction in the trade. Put as much effort into learning and being a good student, and always remember to treat fellow tradespeople with respect. Good luck, and remember that above all else, electrical knowledge will always put you above the rest. I can never underestimate how important the electrical knowledge is.
@@Clasped003 I was talking about the entering physicality of it with large units cause I’m going for commercial but yes I agree
Been doing this for awhile and some air handlers are a nightmare to troubleshoot. No room in some of those cabinets
Think I was in a controlled lab environment AKA school and they had Lennox and carrier, the Lennox seemed like it was built to pop you. I have little lady hands and still kept shocking my self on some sequencer spade connector
Was the only way to get to the limit and heat strips
Facts seems as if the engineering gets worse instead of better. Like why would you put the sequencers , relays limits etc. Directly behind the circuit breaker lol.
@@Begrateful2024 scary I like the fuse links those they don’t hurt as bad but that mf sequencer damn
@Devonte Baker ya aaon puts drives directly in front of relays and fuses on some model configurations. I hate it and it's actually very unsafe to work on them
Im fairly new to the trade and i live in south texas about 30 mins from the border and its barely getting cold so i dont have alot of experience with heat sequencers and this helped me out alot and i enjoy watching your videos, thank you so much sir!
Thank you for all your training and advice. You have helped me quite a few times. I've been in this field for a couple years, and still having trouble understanding the old carrier electric furnace 40AQ030. I've fixed one that was worked on by several hvac guys , I've put it back to original equipment and wiring and still having difficulty. Carrier has upgraded a 230v fan motor but with a little bit different wiring .
Great video. You're a good teacher 👍
Your videos are really good I’m learning many things that I wouldn’t have with trial and error.
I always wondered how those small square ac to dc things worked. Thanks. Hardly ever see them
Very helpful and educational video , thanks for making such videos, and it really helps new technicians in the field
Thank you for watching! I'm glad you found my videos helpful!!
Awesome video. Very precise and descriptive. These help out a lot!!
Great video Craig. Thank you!
I learn so much from this video ❤
thanks for training advice very helpful when our hvac tech is out or on vacation i have to fill your videos have help me
Thank you Bro , I have one unit i check all wiring are ok , the proplem is fan is running but the heater not working , when i shut off the fan the heater work
Im J Hernandez im lerning alot with the videos they are very helpful thank you for it
Can you explain why for some components it's better to test resistance rather then just continuity? I know for some components a resistance test gives you the value you need to verify its working properly but with other components like fuses continuity gives you that answer with an audible beep or silence. I guess what I asking is what components test better with resistance and what components test best with resistance?
You mentioned thermostat wiring done wrong. I was on a commercial job site that the apprentices wired the temporary power GFCIs wrong at the shop, and kept tripping breakers when plugging anything into them. I'm not an electrician, but I do know polarity on AC power.
At work, they have a sign above the cart for green cones used when servicing MCC panels for the arc zone, and among other things, it says that they are only to be used by "electrictians". I mentioned that to one of the mechanics there, and they said that they now know why the cones weren't being used. No one in the employ of the company has that title.
I told the mechanic that this must be referring to some professional that is both a magician and works with electric. What a typo.😀
great video and explanation of these components.
Hi, you didn't create a book for the heating electric element and relays ?, on how they are powered, I seen your video, excellent, I would like yo buy your book on the electric heating, already bought the air conditioning book
Great video!! Extremely thorough 😊
Thank you so much for your video and very good explanation.
Great video! Don't have many air handlers up here in the Chicago area. Ran into one and one if your previous videos helped
What an ancient ventilation unit :)
Great video! I assume the reason why you used the rectifier was because that relay operates off of DC voltage
Can also do a continuity test thermal limit swirh correct
The little popper breaker is rated at 5 A, the 30 VA transformer is good for approximately 1.25 A, won’t the transformers smoke before the 5A little popper breaker opens?
done, rewatch if needed.
Great video - thanks for sharing 👍
Hi i been following your videos and i have a question about the common wire .how it works? what it does ?why the system doesn't work without it. Thanks
Thank you for such great educational information!!
Craig is the man
Great info and Video
Can you please do a residential Aquatherm (firstco) combo ac cool/ hydronic heat. If you haven’t already.
Thanks for the great vids!!
It’s also good to measure the low voltage input side of the relay coil for excessive resistance. That can cause intermittent issues.
Was that heat kit flipped to match the specified air flow direction? I only ask since the lettering on all the components is upside-down. Is this common practice so that heat kits can be used on both up and down draft air handlers?
Great video 👍
Another great video! Thanks!
I have a lennox system where the transformer in the air handler trips every time heat is called. The system comes on fine with ac and fan only but when it calls for heat the transformer trips pretty much immediately. Any thoughts what it could be or what i should check first? I appreciate any help in advance as winter is coming 🥶 and the family needs the heater.
Fantastic video. Very helpful as always.
What costs more, the parts or paying the tech to test and measure all of these parts?
Hi, where can I get the 24 volts temp. power supply tester that is attached to the transformer? tnx in advance
He’s the best
That’s a neat tester!
Hi Craig, great training and videos. I purchased your book and got a lot out of that too. However, I have a problem that is bewildering and hoping for some advice from you. Tempstar FCX6000C AH with PSC fan motor that won't turn off. It is not equipped with a Sequencer but has an Overtemp Limit switch that isn't tripped. HP unit is TCH260AKA1 with demand defrost board. Pulled TStat, no joy. Checked 24V wires for shorts and continuity to Tstat and HP. All ok. Checked signals to pins on AH Fan Control Board and discovered Y from HP has ~18V on it continuously in relation to C terminal. With all signal wires disconnected except for R, C and Y wires from HP, the AH fan turns on - removing Y from AH Y terminal causes fan to turn off after normal delay. I don't know if that voltage is what the demand defrost board normally sends to AH during defrost cycle to turn AH fan on. So the question is, should I suspect Demand Defrost board on HP or Fan control board on AH? I loath throwing parts at anything. I will check the defrost cycle test function and note if the unit functions normally. I'll also check the condenser coil defrost sensor. Your help is greatly appreciated.
Very helpful thanks you
About the DC relays. Johnson Controls / UPG used 28v coil DC relays WITHOUT a rectifier in some of their air handlers around the 2010s. They were sending 24v AC to the relay coil. Can someone explain why (and for that matter how AC voltage works on a DC coil)?
This video is helpful
Can a heating element be added to an air handler?
best explainner
My furnace is blowing Luke warm not hot. What would cause that? It's been like this for years. When it's bitter cold the furnace can't keep up at all.
hey Craig when you make your own testing set up like w a transformer . and have an inline fuse set up ... what size fuse do you use w that ? i want to make my own lil trouble shooting set up .. I picked up a 10/30 output transformer w a 110v input .. I added a plug to it abd 24v t stat wire w that online fuse holder but wasn't sure what's besr fuses to use for trouble shooting 24 v components.. is. a 3 am fuse good or what do you recommend... also I will be ordering your new book soon on the mini splits
Thank you for your advice its really helpful thank you thank you thank you I think that I might be close to have my own company 😆😆
Hey, you only have to remove 1 wire on each component to check the fuses and hi-temp limit switches!! Why potentially loosen more spade connectors and create an intermittent that wasn't there originally than necessary?!?
He could've done it for any number of reasons.
He could've done it because he gets slightly nervous when recording his self.
He could've done it because he has obsessive compulsive disorder (OCD), and everything has to be done in certain multiples, etc.
It is insignificant to question one who is demonstrating something with the sole purpose of educating others, just so as long as the principle itself is understood.
Great video
Can you put a video up on how to make, or where to get, a transformer tester?
I'll just use your multimeter set the voltage AC disconnect your low voltage leads from the Transformer and put your probes on those connectors with the unit powered up you should read 24 plus volts ac. You can also do a continuity test with no voltage and the wires disconnected from the Transformer to see if the windings are broken internally.
What’s the difference between continuity .and ohms
Question?.. when you are checking ohms you are ✔️ getting continuity?
Hope this helps. Continuity, as in a closed circuit, should read 0.0 ohms (or close to it). If the ohm reading is much higher, as in 0.5, first check your meter's reading by just touching the two test leads together. If you still have a reading like 0.5, correct the problem with your meter. If your meter reads 0.0 lead to lead, but the component reads higher, it can be pitting on the contacts of the component, or just a poor connection of your test leads to the component.
Where does the test transformer get its high voltage from?
What could be the problem if you have an electric furnace and oncall for heat the heat strips turn up but the blower fan which is controlled by fan relay does not.
Fan only comes on if you turn the thermostat fan in the on position but not auto when calling for heat
Good stuff 🤘⚡️🤘✨✨✨
Well Dave, you encouraged me to write a minsplut book roughly two years ago. Its now done and coming out in Jan! Thanks for your encouragement!
@@acservicetechchannel I need a copy. Just went to vrv training and still don’t know how to fix them 😂😂😂😂
I will be buying the new book. Thanks for everything.
Question! Does a 6 pin General purpose relay supply the strips with 24 volts? The unit does not have a board. I'm trying to trace a short down and it's difficult. Im getting 24 volts on every thermostat wire but the heat wires. The heat strips have a board which is CNT06195. I've changed it, but I'm still not getting the voltage I need to the heat wire. Before I changed the board, the heat strips would cycle on and off with just 13 volts. Now that I've changed the board with CNT06194 nothing comes on in heat mode , now I'm getting 16 volts. Part of the heat strips would stay on for 7 seconds and go off. Help I'm puzzled!!!! This is a trane. GAM2A0c48s41sba. Thanks
Sequencer is just another contactor, i am enlightened 😅
.1 resistance for thermal fuse
Always check strip heater to ground
Basic using OHM'S Law
What do you do if it's a 2 stage heatpump package and the 10kw heat strip is not working?
The only impact of a heat pump on the electric heat strips is that the defrost board should energize W to run the electric strips during defrost. My heat pump got wired with the W2 on an input terminal on the defrost board instead of the output so wasn't being energized.
Change the batteries In your meter
Why my auxiliary heat coming on and its not cold enough outside
My AC doesn't have a 3 amp fuse anywhere that I can see. Can't even find a PC board.
Super 👍
I have a contactor instead of sequencer
I don't see a problem with taking money, otherwise you can do a lot،If it is through legitimate methods, it works
Your multimeter it’s very complicated I don’t understand it. You should have a common meter on your instructional videos so we can see where to set our meters and what you are talking about. What option is electrical resistance on my meter??🤷♂️🤷♂️
This education is very important to brush up our knowledge. But hopefully the death warning will prevent unknowledgeable people from trying this... Homeowners and such.
One wrong move and bam, your life is over. I work on these, at times, like I'm working with live ammo or bombs 😂
It gets even worse when you have the communicating kind and the AVC thinks heat relays are closed when they are open and because of that it locks out the AC😂 Talk about scratching your head.
Yea tell the world our trade for free.
He wants the people buy his books , l don’t think . He is doing it for free,
Most people don’t have the time, or the interest, or the mechanical or electrical ability to do this. They would rather watch movies or music videos or play games or sports or spend time with family or work at their jobs. Everyday I go to work I pass the fitness center and there are 50 cars in the parking lot.
Great video