Thank you for this video. I am a relatively new in HVAC field, have only 8 years of experience. These kind of stories for adult kids are priceless. No book will give you such knowledge. Thank you!
yep and the condensate hose from furnace is inside the pump and likely underwater and it's effectively double trapped in combination with the trap on furnace. I have a feeling he'll be back there again, sooner than later :) been a whie since I looked at the manual, but pretty sure it says to have an air-gap or open tee fitting at or near outlet of unit trap ;) ** I wonder if the pump is stupidly plugged into the light circuit, which is switched off from the looks of it.
@@throttlebottle5906 agreed. i dont like how he moved the condensate pressure switch so high either. its there to prevent the drainbox from overfilling due to blockage, not to be way up there in my opinion, defeats the purpose of the switch. ruclips.net/video/52S-pogleeo/видео.html yup.. can see it bubbling out on that timestamp. that switch was doing its job, it was water locked due to failed pump
Pump should have been changed on install. “Another call back I guess” again reason why a completely full diagnostic is 100% necessary. I saw that too lol
@@throttlebottle5906 I had that same issue when I first installed my furnace. I didn't have a tee and it siphoned water back out enough to make a mess on the floor after a few days of running in cold northern michigan winter. Good observation on the switched light circuit feeding the condensate pump. I had a service call from a heating and cooling company here to install an extra plug close enough to the furnace in order to plug the condensate pump in because the installers did that exact same thing. Plugged it into the side of the lamp holder and when they switched off the crawl lights the pump quit.
Hey Ted at 11:15 your pump is overflowing. I thought I noticed it earlier in the video. I don’t think your condensate pump was working properly. I could be wrong just thought I would bring it up just in case.
Well I got to admit, 3 of your videos I have learned alot, even at my 1/2 century old. Thanks for all and definitely understand about the late, and tired. Our next generation is gonna be in a bad hurt ,in bad way. Thanks for the knowledge and advice. May god bless you and yours. Hats off from ky
Great job Ted. I've been a hvac tech for over 10 years, glad you got your customers going. That home warranty company hacking up that old furnace is one of those things that piss me off. Even if you think something is bad wrong, you still put it back together, unless the customer tells you right then and there to replace it. I'm guessing by the video that they did not. Been sitting at home for 12 days now with covid, just catching up on all the RUclips vids. Keep making these vids ted, I need to feel like I'm working, even though I'm not!😆
Where I live, algae and mold will clog up an HVAC drain line. Last time I checked, bleach kills algae and mold. I usually flush my HVAC drain line with bleach diluted in hot water at least once every two years. My drain line hasn’t clogged since I adopted this procedure. I would probably try some yellow death coil cleaner but I doubt the supply house would sell it to me.
Back when I did installing, we always told customers to use a cup of white vinegar down the cleanout (I said once a month, but the usual policy was every three months). Always discouraged customers to use bleach, as aluminum coils, don't take to kindly to bleach and neither does PVC. At least that is what I and several A/C companies I have worked for and employees I've talked with have come to as our conclusion. The Bleach when poured in the SS2(condensate pan overflow float switch) instead of the cleanout(usually by the homeowner who is trying to remember what the installer told them and that it goes "in the thing with the cap"), goes into the condensate pan where it sits and is allowed to "breathe" in the same space as the coil until it is diluted by the new condensate and runs out the drain line. This bleach is at least in my opinion found to be a slow but steady coil killer. Though bleach does an admirable job of disinfecting condensate drain lines, It will not "usually" help in the case of a drain line that has been neglected and allowed things to grow and call it home. The slime and nastiness that exists in these drain lines 9/10 won't be touched by bleach. If this were the case then it would be the only thing a service tech would have on his truck/van for a drain line call. Besides not being effective for clearing drain lines, the bleach that is used in the life of the drain line will sit in the line( under slab drain lines mostly, with exception of lines using a trap at the end of the line, and of course what is contained in the trap.) and will eat away and cause the PVC to turn brittle and can lead to cracks/leaks. If you find this not to be the case, good for you I hope you never have a drain line fail to drain or leak. It's never a fun time to be had by anyone. Just giving my $0.02 worth.
@@joep4143 - I am qualified to install and service HVACR equipment. In fact, I held a contractor’s license 35 years ago and installed new equipment in my home last year. Why would I pay some jackleg $125 to pour cleaner down my drain? I only used diluted bleach in the drain line. I use the pan tabs in the coil.
Hey Ted, long time viewer, and I really appreciate your content. With all due respect, I think the issue is that old re-used condensate pump. My guess is the whole point of that water switch being plumbed into the factory p-trap is to shut the system down if it's no longer terminating water properly, and it's set low to prevent the water level from reaching the draft motor. Judging from the water leaking out the side of the pump, I'd say it's either unplugged or failed. Love your work and please forgive the armchair diagnosis. If I'm wrong, then my apologies. Have a great day
The condensate pump tripping would not generate the error code given. Oftentimes the safety switch on the condensate pump isn't even wired into the unit to shut it down and if so there's a high chance that it breaks the Y circuit and not the 24v to the thermostat. Curious if the installer caught the need to break 24v when they switched from an 80% to a 90+ as the condensate pump will now run year round.
No that unit was not fully converter to a horizontal left. That pressure switch with the tube at the bottom like that, will always pick up water in this orientation, as gravity brings it down to the collector box. When condensate pumps fail they just leak all over the ground they don't back feed (in most cases a min. of 12" vertically usually more) to the point a pressure switch is sucking up water. Ray is also correct about the High-High float not being tied in (what he calls breaking 24v or (R) )
Here any wiring below joist level is put in conduit to a handy box with switch to disconnect line voltage and never splice wires outside of junction box. Also couldn't that condensate pump's float switch be shutting the furnace down? The pump looked to be overflowing and not operating.
I remember you mentioning several times before about the need to route that line up before it goes down. I used to keep a really big wooden mallet on my desk and ask employees if I needed to boink them a few times to refresh their memory.
As far as any wire nut connection, from somebody who’s been twisting those things for 50 years, always put your nuts up, if the nut comes loose at the minimum hopefully won’t fall off and cause other issues so always turn your wires up, keep your nuts up
While you are most likely correct that the Romex connections just hanging inside behind the cover would generally not cause a problem, it is NOT to code. All electrical connections must be made within an approved, accessible electrical junction box. Any decent inspector would fail that installation immediately.
We had a fail from a newbie doing that same thing on a furnace install in a new construction. The inspector wanted to see the splice made up inside the internal junction box citing that the furnace cabinet was not an approved splice box.
That 90% furnace cabinet has a less 5% leak rate, and with the door on is enclosed and locked/secured. I installed hvac in the bay area of CA for 2 1/2 years, and that is to code. I've installed up and down CA for over 6 years now and not one area is more strict than the Bay Area (in terms of building code). Don't even get me started on Title 24...... Also if the manufacturer installation book shows another process/method, you can typically persuade the inspector to pass the installation book's recommended procedure. And your last comment is laughable. Careful my guy, falling off your high horse from that height could cause you serious physical and mental harm....An "immediate fail" means you go no further in your inspection process. You don't sound the alarm and wrap is up because of those electrical connections. Most inspectors I know would be decent enough for a minor inspection correction at no additional charge to the customer for the re-inspection of said connection. While still allowing the customer to use the heater until that happens, which could be some time depending on the size of your city/county.
We have to run BX / Armoured cable from the switch to the furnace , put the electrical box where it belongs as that is installers cutting corners . Lastly I price a new condensate pump into the job every time , we have learned that the hard way .
I understand that it was a quick install under no heat condition's but alot of lack of attention to detail. But still going to give you a thumbs up on you going in and taking care of it same day.
went to a call last night ...northern Alberta Canada...-41.....furnace was down for 6hrs...entire house frozen solid....once I got it warm...just an ignitor....water lines frozen solid... this house was newer so it had r-45 insulation..didnt matter.
As an electrician I have a problem with the romex inside the cabinet. Romex is not temperature rated for this and wire connections shall always be in an approved junction box.
Are installer in that much of a hurry to get out from under the house? Looks like crappy working conditions. Seems they don't care what the work looks like since no one sees it. My furnace is a a basement utility/storage room. East to see.
I had a house where the condensation pump was not pumping water but kept flowing water over flowed water got all over the floor .I cleaned up the mess ,made them replace the pump with a commercial grade, cheap pumps have failed me more then once on rentals, the new pump was hard wire where the pump will shut off when over flow .That is standard I would hope looking at units in attics .
Yeah we get snow up north, kinda used to it. We don’t get a lot of equipment in crawl spaces, thank goodness, just makes it harder to work. Enjoy your show and advice and your technical know how shows, need more with your style and clean language. Some of those guys just cuss an complain and then do the same hack repairs and I can’t respect that. I have 40 years in this, over 20 with my own state licenses, so it’s easy to see who knows what they’re doing (or not).
Seems lack of information is common when the equipment is outside or out of sight inside..Most people have little or no idea except it isnt working properly. Home warranty companies arent in the business of getting the best and brightest subcontractors..They want quick cheap repairs. The customer is fortunate when they get an experienced pro to respond..
That white stuff falling down along with the falling temperatures are a couple of the reasons my wife and I retired in her home country, the Philippines. Really do like the videos though.
very nice....looking to see what direction you go for a new truck this year ? I have a 2018 GMC 2500 basic technology, etc. My understanding is Transit types don't do 300k real well ?
Atleast it was an easy fix but the install crew should have fired up that furnace so you wouldn't have to come out at night because you had to eat that bill I used to have to go to almost every install because of something done wrong or not done I talked with the big boss told him almost all of my after hours calls are install error he didn't like it so he started sending a service tech to do start up on every install and told the install crews they had to tighten up or changes would be made because it was the company that was taking the hit for this thanks for the video
If that evap coil was downstream and has a positive air flow through the condensate line, the cap should be removed in order for the air to escape a allow a proper draining of condensate liquid.
I see you do quite a few Trane units. I just had my heat pump replaced with a new indoor unit. The unit is supposed to be a variable speed unit. I have an Ecobee thermostat. I live in Florida and the humidity is higher than my last AC system. I also noticed the variable speed doesn't happen. Should I have gotten the Trane thermostat? I would love for you to work on my system, but I am a long way out of your service area. I also want to point out I have learned a ton from your channel. I replaced my old unit to a Trane because you mentioned the quality of Trane units in one of your videos.
The variable speed airflow should have been set by the installation crew using the "dip switches" inside the air handler. Sounds like your system isn't operating long enough to dehumidify, they probably have the fan set to constant 100% airflow. Thermostat should be fine.
You should have gotten the Trane thermostat. At best, you will get two stages out of the Ecobee. But, if you only have a 1 stage compressor, it doesn't matter that much. If you had a communicating compressor and air handler, then whoever left the Ecobee did you a disservice. One of my thermostats is over the dryer vent, so not very accurate.
"make like a tree and get outa'here" 😆 I've been known to use that line a time or two myself. Bonus points if someone knows what movie that line was from.
Don't see any primer on the 2"pvc for the unit. No safe over flow on the secondary drain no tee after trap. That's big code problems were I live. And with the way the hoses were it should not have run more than 15 min before you get that code on left side configuration. And line voltage wire has to be inside the box for code also
Sloppy/Lazy install. I wouldn’t even admit to doing that replacement and if my workers did that they wouldn’t have a job. That electrical connection is completely unacceptable. There’s a box there for a reason and I didn’t see a shut off or disconnect anywhere either.
I don't know where you are but in the San Juaquin County (CA), in the county, a pigtail connection to an outlet is to code, as is hardwired into the unit as they have it. And I feel bad for your employee's. I'm sure your turn around rate in unreal.... My biggest gripe is that the whole thing is just chilling on cinder blocks. Maybe it's just a CA earthquake thing but here we would have to either have it suspended on unistrut/all-thread or sitting on a concrete pad, in a pan, on isolators, earthquake strapped to the floor joist.
Do it right the first time. Dont be afraid to call someone who has the answer. Take a little razzing. If they humiliate you your day will come. They will need help. If it's your boss, find a better company. But dont hurt the customer. They paid a lot of money for the system and your expertise.
Wow that condensation pump is leaking all over that insulation. That poor ceiling for that customer is gonna be one large payment to get fixed. I really didnt see anything but cosmetic fixing here. the unit heat came on with the hose undone from the switch which was super odd to begin with. i dont think there was much educational purpose here but lack attention to detail.
This is why as a owner we prefer to do all jobs because employees don’t do what owner would do. This owner is good. But employees don’t do it like us owners
You see that’s why we don’t install those overpriced Trane PS 😂😂. Carrier baby haven’t failed me yet and haven’t had a call back ever besides to thank me for making them comfortable.
Ha ha first comment!! Seriously I do enjoy your vlogs I’ve learned a lot from you. A lot about what some people shouldn’t be messing with when they don’t have the experience and gets a little dangerous
What was actually wrong with the original furnace? And what was the problem with the 90%er? Not clear. Also, you replace the old furnace from 96 with 90%er and keep the original 96 ductwork? Doesn’t make any sense. Customer would be better of with replacing the ductwork and keeping and retrofitting the old furnace efficiency-wise...
I don't consider myself a real HVAC technician like yourself because I work in the land of the basement Ohio. The jobs that make me hate my job are jobs you run every day. Attic and crawl space!! 😂
Thank you for this video. I am a relatively new in HVAC field, have only 8 years of experience. These kind of stories for adult kids are priceless. No book will give you such knowledge. Thank you!
Did I see water coming down the side of that condensate pump?
Surprised he didn't see that !
Installers reach for tools, service techs reach for manuals. Keep up,the great videos, it’s awesome seeing a owner out correcting problems
Is it just me, or is water cascading down the side of that condensate pump?
yep and the condensate hose from furnace is inside the pump and likely underwater and it's effectively double trapped in combination with the trap on furnace. I have a feeling he'll be back there again, sooner than later :)
been a whie since I looked at the manual, but pretty sure it says to have an air-gap or open tee fitting at or near outlet of unit trap ;)
** I wonder if the pump is stupidly plugged into the light circuit, which is switched off from the looks of it.
yep
@@throttlebottle5906 agreed. i dont like how he moved the condensate pressure switch so high either. its there to prevent the drainbox from overfilling due to blockage, not to be way up there in my opinion, defeats the purpose of the switch. ruclips.net/video/52S-pogleeo/видео.html yup.. can see it bubbling out on that timestamp. that switch was doing its job, it was water locked due to failed pump
Pump should have been changed on install. “Another call back I guess” again reason why a completely full diagnostic is 100% necessary. I saw that too lol
@@throttlebottle5906 I had that same issue when I first installed my furnace. I didn't have a tee and it siphoned water back out enough to make a mess on the floor after a few days of running in cold northern michigan winter. Good observation on the switched light circuit feeding the condensate pump. I had a service call from a heating and cooling company here to install an extra plug close enough to the furnace in order to plug the condensate pump in because the installers did that exact same thing. Plugged it into the side of the lamp holder and when they switched off the crawl lights the pump quit.
Hey Ted at 11:15 your pump is overflowing. I thought I noticed it earlier in the video. I don’t think your condensate pump was working properly. I could be wrong just thought I would bring it up just in case.
It's okay, his company didn't install that! :)
I saw that too but when he took the tube off earlier it dripped there and maybe its just still there
Last tech in is responsible for everything till the next tech comes along, according to the customer anyways, so hopefully he saw it
It got wet when he took hose off of the drain hub at 6:09
I believe the trap off of the ecoil isn't primed and the air is blowing into the pump.
Well I got to admit, 3 of your videos I have learned alot, even at my 1/2 century old.
Thanks for all and definitely understand about the late, and tired.
Our next generation is gonna be in a bad hurt ,in bad way.
Thanks for the knowledge and advice.
May god bless you and yours.
Hats off from ky
Great job Ted. I've been a hvac tech for over 10 years, glad you got your customers going. That home warranty company hacking up that old furnace is one of those things that piss me off. Even if you think something is bad wrong, you still put it back together, unless the customer tells you right then and there to replace it. I'm guessing by the video that they did not. Been sitting at home for 12 days now with covid, just catching up on all the RUclips vids. Keep making these vids ted, I need to feel like I'm working, even though I'm not!😆
The internal condensate drain piping on modern multi position condensing furnaces can be a butt kicker!
Where I live, algae and mold will clog up an HVAC drain line. Last time I checked, bleach kills algae and mold. I usually flush my HVAC drain line with bleach diluted in hot water at least once every two years. My drain line hasn’t clogged since I adopted this procedure. I would probably try some yellow death coil cleaner but I doubt the supply house would sell it to me.
I’ve been using white vinegar instead of bleach
Won’t sell it to you? Call an hvac company to service it. The channel is titled aniDIY.
Back when I did installing, we always told customers to use a cup of white vinegar down the cleanout (I said once a month, but the usual policy was every three months). Always discouraged customers to use bleach, as aluminum coils, don't take to kindly to bleach and neither does PVC. At least that is what I and several A/C companies I have worked for and employees I've talked with have come to as our conclusion. The Bleach when poured in the SS2(condensate pan overflow float switch) instead of the cleanout(usually by the homeowner who is trying to remember what the installer told them and that it goes "in the thing with the cap"), goes into the condensate pan where it sits and is allowed to "breathe" in the same space as the coil until it is diluted by the new condensate and runs out the drain line. This bleach is at least in my opinion found to be a slow but steady coil killer. Though bleach does an admirable job of disinfecting condensate drain lines, It will not "usually" help in the case of a drain line that has been neglected and allowed things to grow and call it home. The slime and nastiness that exists in these drain lines 9/10 won't be touched by bleach. If this were the case then it would be the only thing a service tech would have on his truck/van for a drain line call. Besides not being effective for clearing drain lines, the bleach that is used in the life of the drain line will sit in the line( under slab drain lines mostly, with exception of lines using a trap at the end of the line, and of course what is contained in the trap.) and will eat away and cause the PVC to turn brittle and can lead to cracks/leaks. If you find this not to be the case, good for you I hope you never have a drain line fail to drain or leak. It's never a fun time to be had by anyone. Just giving my $0.02 worth.
@@kylewalker6375 but if you do not have a neutralizer on a 90% furnace it is eating out the traps
@@joep4143 - I am qualified to install and service HVACR equipment. In fact, I held a contractor’s license 35 years ago and installed new equipment in my home last year. Why would I pay some jackleg $125 to pour cleaner down my drain? I only used diluted bleach in the drain line. I use the pan tabs in the coil.
Hey Ted, long time viewer, and I really appreciate your content. With all due respect, I think the issue is that old re-used condensate pump. My guess is the whole point of that water switch being plumbed into the factory p-trap is to shut the system down if it's no longer terminating water properly, and it's set low to prevent the water level from reaching the draft motor. Judging from the water leaking out the side of the pump, I'd say it's either unplugged or failed. Love your work and please forgive the armchair diagnosis. If I'm wrong, then my apologies. Have a great day
The condensate pump tripping would not generate the error code given. Oftentimes the safety switch on the condensate pump isn't even wired into the unit to shut it down and if so there's a high chance that it breaks the Y circuit and not the 24v to the thermostat. Curious if the installer caught the need to break 24v when they switched from an 80% to a 90+ as the condensate pump will now run year round.
No that unit was not fully converter to a horizontal left. That pressure switch with the tube at the bottom like that, will always pick up water in this orientation, as gravity brings it down to the collector box. When condensate pumps fail they just leak all over the ground they don't back feed (in most cases a min. of 12" vertically usually more) to the point a pressure switch is sucking up water. Ray is also correct about the High-High float not being tied in (what he calls breaking 24v or (R) )
-20 Thursday in Minnesnoda, I’m grateful to have a 1 year old furnace, walls and roof over my head.
Here any wiring below joist level is put in conduit to a handy box with switch to disconnect line voltage and never splice wires outside of junction box. Also couldn't that condensate pump's float switch be shutting the furnace down? The pump looked to be overflowing and not operating.
Ted said he can drive on the wrong side of the road if he wants to!! Take that!! 😂
I remember you mentioning several times before about the need to route that line up before it goes down. I used to keep a really big wooden mallet on my desk and ask employees if I needed to boink them a few times to refresh their memory.
I'd say tape sticks quite nicely to dirt. The problem is the dirt doesn't stick to to the duct.
blue port cap missing under pressure switch. directly above nut driver at 9:30 ..nice work thanks again
As far as any wire nut connection, from somebody who’s been twisting those things for 50 years, always put your nuts up, if the nut comes loose at the minimum hopefully won’t fall off and cause other issues so always turn your wires up, keep your nuts up
While you are most likely correct that the Romex connections just hanging inside behind the cover would generally not cause a problem, it is NOT to code. All electrical connections must be made within an approved, accessible electrical junction box. Any decent inspector would fail that installation immediately.
We had a fail from a newbie doing that same thing on a furnace install in a new construction. The inspector wanted to see the splice made up inside the internal junction box citing that the furnace cabinet was not an approved splice box.
That 90% furnace cabinet has a less 5% leak rate, and with the door on is enclosed and locked/secured. I installed hvac in the bay area of CA for 2 1/2 years, and that is to code. I've installed up and down CA for over 6 years now and not one area is more strict than the Bay Area (in terms of building code). Don't even get me started on Title 24...... Also if the manufacturer installation book shows another process/method, you can typically persuade the inspector to pass the installation book's recommended procedure. And your last comment is laughable. Careful my guy, falling off your high horse from that height could cause you serious physical and mental harm....An "immediate fail" means you go no further in your inspection process. You don't sound the alarm and wrap is up because of those electrical connections. Most inspectors I know would be decent enough for a minor inspection correction at no additional charge to the customer for the re-inspection of said connection. While still allowing the customer to use the heater until that happens, which could be some time depending on the size of your city/county.
Electric electrical code's approve the inside of furnace case as. A j box. You do not need a j box installed. Look code's to that effect.
Bull crap. The inside case of furnace is allowed as a j box
Attention to detail is everything!
Would the install manual have told the installer about those pressure switch hoses? I'm a service tech
We have to run BX / Armoured cable from the switch to the furnace , put the electrical box where it belongs as that is installers cutting corners . Lastly I price a new condensate pump into the job every time , we have learned that the hard way .
ya. You touched 15 yr.old cond.pump during install of new furn, so you must have wrecked it. LOL.
Broken condensate pump ! Leaking out the side
I'm from northeastern PA so the snow is nothing to me. Having said that, when its not something you experience regularly, it can be exciting.
I understand that it was a quick install under no heat condition's but alot of lack of attention to detail. But still going to give you a thumbs up on you going in and taking care of it same day.
went to a call last night ...northern Alberta Canada...-41.....furnace was down for 6hrs...entire house frozen solid....once I got it warm...just an ignitor....water lines frozen solid... this house was newer so it had r-45 insulation..didnt matter.
As an electrician I have a problem with the romex inside the cabinet. Romex is not temperature rated for this and wire connections shall always be in an approved junction box.
Are installer in that much of a hurry to get out from under the house? Looks like crappy working conditions. Seems they don't care what the work looks like since no one sees it. My furnace is a a basement utility/storage room. East to see.
Out here in California you power has tp be in flex metal conduit to protect the wires
Michigan ,must be in condeut,or Greenfield for romex
I had a house where the condensation pump was not pumping water but kept flowing water over flowed water got all over the floor .I cleaned up the mess ,made them replace the pump with a commercial grade, cheap pumps have failed me more then once on rentals, the new pump was hard wire where the pump will shut off when over flow .That is standard I would hope looking at units in attics .
Ted, I really like your videos. Where or how where you able to get a van with that type of service doors ?
Keep up the good work !
Yeah we get snow up north, kinda used to it. We don’t get a lot of equipment in crawl spaces, thank goodness, just makes it harder to work. Enjoy your show and advice and your technical know how shows, need more with your style and clean language. Some of those guys just cuss an complain and then do the same hack repairs and I can’t respect that. I have 40 years in this, over 20 with my own state licenses, so it’s easy to see who knows what they’re doing (or not).
The power wire should be in that box for sure. In my state that would fail code. Looks like that pump was over flowing.
Thank you for the vids and usually the last one I watch before going to bed (good timing)
Lol that’s crazy. I watch his videos right before going to sleep as well.
Seems lack of information is common when the equipment is outside or out of sight inside..Most people have little or no idea except it isnt working properly. Home warranty companies arent in the business of getting the best and brightest subcontractors..They want quick cheap repairs. The customer is fortunate when they get an experienced pro to respond..
That white stuff falling down along with the falling temperatures are a couple of the reasons my wife and I retired in her home country, the Philippines. Really do like the videos though.
That thermostat wire 🙄
No "hack job" in the title? I'm surprised
Because it was his guys...
Nice install the things I thought of you covered like the mastic I did notice the lift pump was full
I wouldn't be Happy with that install
very nice....looking to see what direction you go for a new truck this year ? I have a 2018 GMC 2500 basic technology, etc. My understanding is Transit types don't do 300k real well ?
Nice follow up on your crew. What gets inspected gets done in the future.
The unit is UL listed for those connections inside the box that is supplied.
It is very cold in peoria ill -5 at this time by the way nice job
Same here in Metamora.
Atleast it was an easy fix but the install crew should have fired up that furnace so you wouldn't have to come out at night because you had to eat that bill I used to have to go to almost every install because of something done wrong or not done I talked with the big boss told him almost all of my after hours calls are install error he didn't like it so he started sending a service tech to do start up on every install and told the install crews they had to tighten up or changes would be made because it was the company that was taking the hit for this thanks for the video
Does a new installation not come with a new condensate pump? That old one looks like it's leaking.
I was thinking the same thing....Gotta squeeze out that extra $40 in profit I guess lol
Have you had iproblem in your area with condensation traps needing to be deeper on heatpumps with those high pressure duct jobs
The changes you applied, are they outlined in the Trane IOM?
Love gaining knowledge from you videos
Amazing that if your guys would just read the install instructions then you wouldn't be there.
So amazing. I never would have thought that a person could make a mistake. Simply amazing.
Looks like condensate pump is inoperable and furnace will probably trip out on low pressure switch again due to draining issue
If that evap coil was downstream and has a positive air flow through the condensate line, the cap should be removed in order for the air to escape a allow a proper draining of condensate liquid.
Wrong.
Pump is NOT leaking. The light from his cam is shimmering off the water from him tapping the switch’s tube against it earlier in the vid
I see you do quite a few Trane units. I just had my heat pump replaced with a new indoor unit. The unit is supposed to be a variable speed unit. I have an Ecobee thermostat. I live in Florida and the humidity is higher than my last AC system. I also noticed the variable speed doesn't happen. Should I have gotten the Trane thermostat? I would love for you to work on my system, but I am a long way out of your service area.
I also want to point out I have learned a ton from your channel. I replaced my old unit to a Trane because you mentioned the quality of Trane units in one of your videos.
What is the model number of your air handler. You got a new full system, correct? Is it the same size as your old one?
The variable speed airflow should have been set by the installation crew using the "dip switches" inside the air handler. Sounds like your system isn't operating long enough to dehumidify, they probably have the fan set to constant 100% airflow. Thermostat should be fine.
You should have gotten the Trane thermostat. At best, you will get two stages out of the Ecobee. But, if you only have a 1 stage compressor, it doesn't matter that much. If you had a communicating compressor and air handler, then whoever left the Ecobee did you a disservice.
One of my thermostats is over the dryer vent, so not very accurate.
@@johnhaller5851 A Trane communicating system wouldn't even run off an Ecobee
You might want to consider a non-conductive ring for safety
Good installer would have caught that
yup we got that in texas cant believe i would see it snow in texas again.
looks good ted com up 2 mn we have snow 20below cold
"make like a tree and get outa'here" 😆 I've been known to use that line a time or two myself. Bonus points if someone knows what movie that line was from.
Don't see any primer on the 2"pvc for the unit. No safe over flow on the secondary drain no tee after trap. That's big code problems were I live. And with the way the hoses were it should not have run more than 15 min before you get that code on left side configuration. And line voltage wire has to be inside the box for code also
Sloppy/Lazy install. I wouldn’t even admit to doing that replacement and if my workers did that they wouldn’t have a job. That electrical connection is completely unacceptable. There’s a box there for a reason and I didn’t see a shut off or disconnect anywhere either.
I don't know where you are but in the San Juaquin County (CA), in the county, a pigtail connection to an outlet is to code, as is hardwired into the unit as they have it. And I feel bad for your employee's. I'm sure your turn around rate in unreal.... My biggest gripe is that the whole thing is just chilling on cinder blocks. Maybe it's just a CA earthquake thing but here we would have to either have it suspended on unistrut/all-thread or sitting on a concrete pad, in a pan, on isolators, earthquake strapped to the floor joist.
Home inspectors in Michigan saying that the Romex Wire is not approved to be ran out of sleeve inside the furnace. Besides not UL approved
Everyone please just watch Part two before wasting your breath!!!! 😂😂😂
Don’t touch it , it’s trash. Don’t put your name on it unless you are going take responsibility for that ps confortmaker.
I love comfort maker. Looks and acts like a carrier
Do it right the first time. Dont be afraid to call someone who has the answer. Take a little razzing. If they humiliate you your day will come. They will need help. If it's your boss, find a better company. But dont hurt the customer. They paid a lot of money for the system and your expertise.
I'd say the installers owe the boss sometime. When I worked for corporate callbacks were on me
+1 for the Biff Tannen reference.
Is it just me...or is that condensate pump leaking?
what gets me is the owner having to respond to a no heat call in the dark and snow after his "guys" did an install.
I figured he was going to replace that hacked up unit
If you tighten down to much on the romex youll cut the insulation....
Looks fine to me. Gotta make sure the burner can move for errr ahh seismic reasons.... Yeah earthquake proof.
I keep spray glue on my van and it will let tape stick to wet or dirty insulation
I live about 2-1/2 hours south of you and snow is a four letter word in my vocabulary.
When you are from an area that doesn't see snow often, isn't it beautiful when it does snow?
Wow that condensation pump is leaking all over that insulation. That poor ceiling for that customer is gonna be one large payment to get fixed. I really didnt see anything but cosmetic fixing here. the unit heat came on with the hose undone from the switch which was super odd to begin with. i dont think there was much educational purpose here but lack attention to detail.
Also should have replaced that con pump that was from 1996.
This is why as a owner we prefer to do all jobs because employees don’t do what owner would do. This owner is good. But employees don’t do it like us owners
So, was the pressure switch installed contrary to the recommended way?
Installed for upflow. That is a horizontal left install. On the condensing furnaces you need to adjust the plumbing based on orientation.
We like to share. It is -13°F this morning in Northern WI after getting 12 inches plus on Thursday this past week. 😺🐶
factory should make it so you don't have to modified it
You see that’s why we don’t install those overpriced Trane PS 😂😂. Carrier baby haven’t failed me yet and haven’t had a call back ever besides to thank me for making them comfortable.
Been installing Rheem last 20 years. No problem and cheaper for parts
I passed you Monday on East Farris Rd. I work for Gunter and wanted to stop you and say hi.
Ha ha first comment!! Seriously I do enjoy your vlogs I’ve learned a lot from you. A lot about what some people shouldn’t be messing with when they don’t have the experience and gets a little dangerous
What was actually wrong with the original furnace? And what was the problem with the 90%er? Not clear. Also, you replace the old furnace from 96 with 90%er and keep the original 96 ductwork? Doesn’t make any sense. Customer would be better of with replacing the ductwork and keeping and retrofitting the old furnace efficiency-wise...
Whats the going rate for your new installer position? Haha
500 per day.
@@TedCookHVAC How many days per week is average for your installers? $500 a day is nice.
500 per day if u install 5 units per day.
another fine video, thanks for sharing
Thanks for watching !!
Next time just follow where the wire goes should find a switch
Ever heard of unistrut and allthread? Lol, just throw the new unit on some cinderblocks and call it a day.
Silver tape and plumbers straps holding the pvc up ??? Not a very professional looking install yikes 😳
Great video Ted
Cryppy crawlspace beware with a python sleeping in there 😳
Trane sent unit with those tubes wrong ??
I am not a Trane guy but that is probably a multi-position furnace so depending your install position you would have to change it.
Am I the only one that noticed the plug missing on the inducer under the pressure switch?
Great video!!
Ol van needs some new wipers
buy the book Practical HVAC on AMZN
I don't consider myself a real HVAC technician like yourself because I work in the land of the basement Ohio. The jobs that make me hate my job are jobs you run every day. Attic and crawl space!! 😂
The Cowboy Ted is going to save the day for this customer !!
It's Snowing in Southland!
Vinegar in the drain line!
Interesting. Thanks. 😁
Nice video Ted.. sure do wish I knew more bout 90%ers
What do you want to know? I'm a tech
Guess no permit or wires be in box