Don't Buy a High Efficiency Furnace!

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  • Опубликовано: 13 янв 2023
  • There are 3 reasons why you should not buy a 90% high efficiency furnace over an 80% standard efficiency furnace. IF your main objective in a new furnace purchase is to save money. The three reasons I go over in this video are: expensive upfront cost, high repair cost, and decreased lifespan.
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Комментарии • 1,2 тыс.

  • @MsckMatt
    @MsckMatt 11 месяцев назад +40

    As an hvac tech, I actually do agree with most of this. The repair cost for the customer for standard efficiency furnaces is drastically lower. On average swapping an inducer motor on a standard furnace ends up costing the customer on average $300-$400 all said and done.
    Then I've swapped out some very top of the line modulating inducer motors that no joke cost the customer over $2000. You go from buying a simple motor to buying an extremely complicated motor, that has extra components like a transducer and sometimes even needing a board replacement with new harnesses if it's york. Not to mention how much more complicated the troubleshooting process can be. I've taken classes at york for their high end equipment and even in the classes 80% of the troubleshooting involves being on the phone with tech support. With all these variables the chances of a misdiagnoses on a top of the line furnace is higher, which means mistakes happen and the wrong part may get put it at the cost of the customer. All this can be avoided by just having a nice standard 80% furnace.
    Also yes, problems with the secondary heat exchanger is always a killer for the unit. It does not take a lot to have them get clogged up especially if the combustion isn't dialed in properly

    • @coryjackson3131
      @coryjackson3131 6 месяцев назад +1

      All furnaces now have high efficiency motors so there’s no choice .

  • @gibblespascack1418
    @gibblespascack1418 Год назад +127

    When We purchased our house 19 years ago, it had a 60% furnace. We purchased a Trane 94% AFU, 2 stage, condensing furnace. It paid for itself in 4.5 winters by NG gas savings alone. With cleaning/maintenance every 2 years, it lasted 19 years until we sold the house. It is still working well today. The house is located in upstate NY, so winters are a thing.

    • @rooky55
      @rooky55 Год назад +17

      My Lennox condensing furnace has been heating my large house in northern Canada for 37 years without a repair.

    • @soisaidtogod4248
      @soisaidtogod4248 Год назад +12

      Oh yeah, there is zero reason to keep any old natural draft furnace in any home. Full 40% of the gas you pay for is right up the chimney.

    • @rickblue7002
      @rickblue7002 Год назад +6

      Ya I have installed a few hundred high efficiency furnaces and I totally do agree with what he has said and most of mine are 20 years old never had to repair any yet except for small parts, also thankless hot water heaters will never go back to tank.

    • @arthouston7361
      @arthouston7361 Год назад +38

      That’s because you purchased that Trane furnace almost 19 years ago. You couldn’t buy a Trane furnace today that would last 19 years. Secondly, 19 years ago you had a PSC blower motor which would last a good 20 years. Today’s Trane condensing furnace contains an ECM motor which has about a four year lifespan and they cost over $1000 to replace. The advice given in the video is advice for people making the purchase now…..not 19 years ago, not 37 years ago….. now.

    • @rickblue7002
      @rickblue7002 Год назад +1

      Well you should service it twice a year spring and fall.

  • @Chris.Brisson
    @Chris.Brisson Год назад +47

    My furnace is now over 50 years old and is still going strong. I've owned the house for 26 years and have spent $0 on furnace maintenance beyond filter cost. Things were made so much better back when CEOs were not focused on planned obsolesce and trimming ever penny from the cost of components.

    • @FALCO797
      @FALCO797 Год назад +1

      Nice! curious if you have an outdoor AC unit too? Just wondering if your AC if you have it is running strong too?

    • @Chris.Brisson
      @Chris.Brisson Год назад +3

      @@FALCO797 unfortunately I do not have central AC. I get by with window-mounted air conditioning units.

    • @lisaryder1668
      @lisaryder1668 4 месяца назад +2

      Got that right, back in in those days things were meant to last forever, not u til the warranty runs out! Lucky u

    • @Lightendog
      @Lightendog Месяц назад +1

      @@highwind8124 LOL, you must of got screwed on a high efficiency furnace. You don't know his furnace is unsafe but assume so. And yes, a lit candle in a house can also endanger everyone in a home but people still use them.

    • @dvmartel1
      @dvmartel1 Месяц назад

      It's not the CEOs

  • @williamdurbinsr.7321
    @williamdurbinsr.7321 Год назад +53

    I agree with a lot of what you said,Jay. As a retired HVAC man I am fortunate enough to have installed my own equipment. Having eliminated the "middle man" by purchasing from the factory. I can honestly say my electric bill was cut in half with the high efficiency & the gas bill is relatively the same after 6+ seasons. I do want to make a statement. In my opinion, it doesn't matter how energy efficient we try to be,we are never going to win because these greedy corporate energy companies are going to charge us more $$$ because of their share holders! 80% or 98+% we can't win! Enjoy your knowledge,Jay.

    • @wisenber
      @wisenber Год назад +2

      "we are never going to win because these greedy corporate energy companies are going to charge us more $$$ because of their share holders! "
      I own two gas wells on my property, no share holders. I get paid whatever the market rate is. I don't sell for less than the market rate, and i can't sell above it.

    • @Rhaspun
      @Rhaspun Год назад +5

      What savings you get from using a high efficiency HVAC system is lost to the higher price of the units. You save on the one hand and pay with the other. Companies know this and will always take advantage of it.

    • @wisenber
      @wisenber Год назад +5

      @@Rhaspun The math just doesn't add up when the most you're looking at between 80 and 98 is a potential 18 percent reduction during the heating season alone. Saving 36 bucks off a 200 dollar gas bill less than five months a year means you might save 1800 bucks over a decade. Meanwhile, you paid the 4 grand difference in installation and unit cost in year 1. That 4 grand might be 8 grand if you put it in a mutual fund for ten years instead of a furnace.
      In 20 years, you might save 5 grand if gas prices doubled a decade later. Meanwhile, your 4 grand would have grown to 16 grand in the mutual fund. If your unit doesn't last 20 years, you're even further in the hole.

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад

      @@wisenber are your wells still producing and for how long? Just curious?

    • @wisenber
      @wisenber Год назад +4

      @@MK-xl9tt The last survey indicated that I can expect the same yield for at 25 more years. If I used it only for my personal consumption, it's enough for about another 150 years.
      I've intentionally limited how much they produce. They pretty much paid for the 20 acres I'm on along with the house I built and my 50X100 shop.
      As they near commercial exhaustion, there's still enough to fully run everything on my property as long as I'm alive.

  • @123musclehead
    @123musclehead 11 месяцев назад +18

    I do HVAC in Canada and I agree 100%. I see older furnaces lasting 25 years and my boss wants me to convince the customers to have them replaced with ZERO problems. The pitch is that they will save money. How the F do you save money by spending money? The heat exchangers on those old furnaces are 1000 times better. I have seen so many York furnaces have heat exchanger problems after 3-5 years its mind boggling.

    • @HeavyInstinct
      @HeavyInstinct 27 дней назад +1

      My home was built in 1995 and the original Carrier (standard efficiency) furnace is still going strong. And I live in Wisconsin so it gets used on a year-round basis since I also have central air. I'm also still using the original refrigerator and stove with zero problems. They just don't make things like they used to.

  • @WordofAdviceTV
    @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад +122

    Hi everyone!! I just want to make a disclaimer to clear up possible misunderstandings. I am NOT against high efficiency furnaces. They are nice units! They look great, are efficient and quiet. Are they better than the 80% units? Absolutely. If money is not a concern for you, buy a high efficiency unit. I just don't like the sales pitch that highly overestimates how much money these high efficiency furnaces save. Often the 95% furnace is compared to a 60% furnace to show impressive savings but really they should be comparing it to an 80% furnace. People who are looking to save money should opt for an 80% furnace. Less money upfront, less repair costs, and very likely to last longer. It will heat the house just as good as a high efficiency furnace.

    • @scpatl4now
      @scpatl4now Год назад +11

      A good layer of spray foam insulation in your attic will save you WAY more money.

    • @mrlukenukem88
      @mrlukenukem88 Год назад +8

      In canada it’s illegal to purchase a 80 percent furnace. A furnace only meets its efficiency when it’s extreme cold. We’ve been putting in iflow units that have a real 90 percent efficiency they blow the gas furnaces out of the water and only have 4 parts

    • @jthonn
      @jthonn Год назад +3

      @@mrlukenukem88 Canada!, wow that is really cold up there so I believe you.

    • @Hunterhunter-ir9nz
      @Hunterhunter-ir9nz Год назад +8

      When I replaced my "VERY tired but still working" 35-year-old furnace at my home, my installer asked my opinion and I said 80%. Less to break and cheaper to fix. And he'd been in the industry for 50 yrs. And he said, "yep".

    • @Pappy-1
      @Pappy-1 Год назад +2

      @@mrlukenukem88 don't you need an actual furnace though. These are just basically heat exchangers they do not actually produce heat without a furnace.

  • @KC-cx7ev
    @KC-cx7ev 4 месяца назад +9

    I have a old Bard furnace that is close to 50 years old and working fine, Only cost for over the last 35 years is filter replacements. After listening to you and a couple of others I have decided to keep it for the factors that you mentioned. Thanks for your video.

  • @williammurray8542
    @williammurray8542 Год назад +20

    As a retired HVAC technician I agree with your comments, however living in Canada, high efficiency is your only option if you need a furnace, as mid efficiency furnaces were discontinued in 2010 😢

    • @andreaberryman5354
      @andreaberryman5354 9 месяцев назад +2

      They pretty much are here too. I don't think they can be bought.

  • @pleskbruce
    @pleskbruce Год назад +13

    I certainly understand why you have over 400,000 subscribers. Your videos show the most common sense, knowledge, and objectivity of just about any I have seen (on ANY topic). And your presentation organization, style, and pace are excellent. Happy to be a new subscriber and to bookmark you on my own "home resources" log. Thanks so much for doing these. I'll be watching!

  • @benkuxhouse787
    @benkuxhouse787 Год назад +170

    I am an HVAC, professional 37 years. I completely 100% agree with everything in this video. I feel the same way about high-efficiency air, conditioners and heat pumps with inverters. They are so expensive. They never will pay for themselves. It’s just getting a little too ridiculous and complicated especially in residential. A $3000 repair bill usually hurts most people pretty good.

    • @juanlopezhenriquez8990
      @juanlopezhenriquez8990 Год назад +4

      Me too

    • @user-mq9co4tl1w
      @user-mq9co4tl1w Год назад +4

      Yup! Thanks Sir!

    • @Ratlins9
      @Ratlins9 Год назад +12

      Your comment based on 37 years experience along with Jay’s video is all the confirmation I need for my next furnace.

    • @jthonn
      @jthonn Год назад +6

      @@Ratlins9 My thoughts exactly

    • @zschmois
      @zschmois Год назад +12

      It might be true for many, but generalizing like this is a dangerous way to think. For example, my wife and I moved into a medium sized house in NH with a recently installed 95% propane furnace. What we didn't know was the shape of the house and climate would lead to a propane bill of about $6000 a year. We ended up installing a geothermal system for $25000 which went down to about $18000 after rebates. So far, it uses less than $1000 in electricity (even with the crazy new rates) so we're expecting a payback time of about 3 years. The loan we got costs much less than our monthly propane bill. The maintenance is far less too (about $100 a year for both heating and cooling vs $300 for the furnace plus $100 for the AC). Not to mention it's more comfortable and it makes the air less dry in the winter.
      Now this isn't a typical situation, but many in NH have this problem and if we resist change for the sake of resisting, it'll do more hurt then good.
      As for the 80% vs HE furnaces debate, there's definitely a good argument there for the 80%. Like everything, it's a numbers game. The trick is knowing what the numbers are and be able to project costs accurately

  • @ronen10314
    @ronen10314 Год назад +3

    35 years in the business. You are straight to the point that exactly what I tell my customers

  • @davidherrera3658
    @davidherrera3658 Год назад +3

    I’ve been following you for a while and appreciate your input and the way you explain things. Thank you

  • @richardwernst
    @richardwernst Год назад +5

    Great, thanks. My gas furnace from around 1960 still works great. Had to have the blower (forced air) replaced around 1984. The one thing I'd advise for old furnace would be to replace the pilot light setup with electronic. No need to turn it off in summer (if you do that) and relight, etc. and no wasted gas for the pilot itself even in winter.

  • @justadbeer
    @justadbeer Год назад +5

    Great advice. My new house has a high efficiency Carrier unit that's 20 years old (previous owner had new heat exchanger installed) and of course the thing takes a crap in a cold snap (10-15 degrees) over Thanksgiving when family are flying in. and of course because it's 20 yrs old and also a proprietary unit, parts are not readily available and need to be ordered from out of state. That board with labor cost me $950. Then over Christmas, it goes out again. The guy doesn't answer his phone, but I has a little schooling in HVAC and watched your videos, read the fault codes and found that my condensate box was plugged. easy fix after draining almost a gallon of water out and cleaning the box. They want $7200 to replace the furnace with a Trane unit. He said he can save me 1k if we go with the Goodman, but it's a little louder. My problem is that I don't have a chimney, so I don't know if I can go to an 80% furnace.

  • @azycray4801
    @azycray4801 Год назад +4

    Great advice from a retired gas fitter. I've replaced my furnace twice in the last 30 years, both times with an 80% model.

  • @peterc1597
    @peterc1597 Год назад +26

    This guy really makes a lot of sense. I have been in the business for close to 40 years. If you need to get rid of your money buy a high efficiency and most complicated unit and you will find out. Thank you for sharing great info.

    • @scpatl4now
      @scpatl4now Год назад +2

      If anyone needs to get rid of their money, I would gladly aid them in that task...lol

    • @anthonysova7117
      @anthonysova7117 Год назад +4

      I also agree being retired from HVACR Nothing compares to the repair price and the look on the customers face My I add the installation usually Will lead u to the problem 50% of the time especially airflow and maintenance of the secondary drain CHEERS By the way I don’t miss being on call.

    • @WordofAdviceTV
      @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад +2

      Thank you all! It's an honor to hear that veteran techs are of the same opinion. I appreciate you sharing your thoughts on the matter! Haha Anthony, I am happy for you - that you no longer have to get called out in the middle of the night. 👍👍 That call out notification sound on my phone will be permanently ingrained in my head. 😅

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 Год назад

      If you want to get rid of your money by wasting gas on a 80%, ill gladly take that money if were all here asking for hand outs 😁

  • @sharonandronenns1709
    @sharonandronenns1709 Год назад +4

    Hi. Sharon and Ron here in Alberta Canada. Our flame master furnace was installed in 1976. We bought the house in 1987. Replaced the exchanger in 1987 for total of $75. Have not had any problems

  • @justinbelleville1392
    @justinbelleville1392 Год назад +3

    Thank you for sharing! I agree 100%. I’m an HVAC and plumbing tech. I say the exact same thing about high efficiency on demand water heaters. I only offer to install an IBC on demand water heater because they only have 5 components compared to 42 (on average).

  • @andylowe2725
    @andylowe2725 Год назад +10

    Agreed! My parent's gas furnace works flawlessly over 50 years now.

    • @benkuxhouse787
      @benkuxhouse787 Год назад +2

      I miss the old days. I started in 1985 and with the truck with a decent amount of truck stock. Nothing too crazy I could repair just about every furnace out there. Now forget that because of all the different parts. When it comes time to replace it, just put an 80% furnace in. The thing I have to warn you of though is the government right now especially with the Democrats in charge of the Fed want to make a minimum for efficiency 90%. So if your parents are thinking about replacing the furnace soon they should do it before any new regulations, and they will have to get a condensating furnace. Those old furnaces are tanks, but they won’t last forever.

    • @JohnFriday3
      @JohnFriday3 Год назад

      @@benkuxhouse787 I wonder how you feel about old cars and old refrigerators and furniture and old computers. If you believe older is better you are delusional. The fact is, the improvements ARE better. The problem is people like you who are not capable of learning something new and use rubber bands and gum to keep crap running longer, but endangering people.

  • @davehorlacher
    @davehorlacher Год назад +3

    Agree, I have a mid 1980's American Standard Furnace and A/C unit. 2 HVAC guys came out and said they are still very worth repairing over replacing them are very efficient for my 930 sqft Bungalow in the Northeast.

  • @MK-xl9tt
    @MK-xl9tt Год назад +42

    30 years in the industry and I completely agree with everything you said. You are very knowledgeable on residential equipment. My main reason for selling high efficiency furnaces is no chimney or eliminating an old chimney with no liner. Unfortunately the government sets the efficiency standards and all furnaces are now going to require ecm blower motors which are more problematic and ridiculously more expensive. It such a racket. I sell my customers on reliability and they thankful for the honesty.

    • @nicholashaines4136
      @nicholashaines4136 Год назад +2

      I personally go for the high efficiency just because the venting is much easier to manage being pvc, HOWEVER, past that give me single stage valve, single speed blower, nothing fancy

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 Год назад

      @@nicholashaines4136 110% wrong on multi-speed fans and gas valves. In fact, I'd recommend upgrading past the dollar tree single stage or multistage fan motors and going with an ECM motor. Extremely quiet, way more efficient, and will 3-4 times longer.

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад +3

      Psc motors are on there way out ecm is the new industry standard they are quieter, more efficient, and better modulation of air flow all good points. I personally haven’t noticed them to last longer than multiple speed motors actually the opposite and 3 to 4 times the cost to replace this would be the down side. Government sets the industry efficiency standards so good or bad its what we’ll be installing.

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 Год назад

      @@MK-xl9tt 100% ECM last longer due on start up that dont get 100% power all at once blasted at them. Instead ECM very slowly ramps up the power = less wear on motor and duct popping.

    • @orlandojohnson5742
      @orlandojohnson5742 Год назад

      I know what you mean… the last standard furnace I sold to my surprise had an ECM motor! And the dip switch settings were so small to read I couldn’t tell what my CFM’s were set for!!!! I ended up jus starting ac up & adjusting best I could! Fortunately the airflow for heat & cool was pre-adjusted correctly! I hate when they make a simpler thing more complicated! “If it ain’t broke don’t try to fix it better!”

  • @barrysloas277
    @barrysloas277 Год назад +7

    I have been telling everyone this forever. I am an hvac tech going on 27 years. I have never seen a high efficiency unit go more than 5 years without a problem and condensing heat exchangers always clog up the drains and heat exchanger itself-I personally would not own one yet. I just replaced my whole system and installed an 80 per enter.

    • @johnurban7333
      @johnurban7333 Год назад

      Come on over and you’ll see your first one

    • @barrysloas277
      @barrysloas277 Год назад

      I am sure it happens but it is very rare-I don’t like the odds.

  • @johngregreid1
    @johngregreid1 Год назад +1

    This is great advice. A couple of years ago, I got the basic one. My son-in-law didn’t listen to me & bought the ‘better’ one. He has had several problems already.

  • @ddmcpaisley6299
    @ddmcpaisley6299 6 месяцев назад +4

    OMG, yes. We had done without an old screen door at the rear of our house (which happens to be the main entrance). We just happened to run into an old aluminun one at a yard sale a few weeks ago. Luckily it had the frame pieces, which has been one delay in me (@ 70) replacing it. We paid 5.00 for it, I got it going and a young man helped finish hanging the frame. I bought some new cedar trim and bottom 2X4 to support and YAY...we noticed the difference immediately. Our house is 10 times more warm. It is raining and 40 outside, but cozy without the heat on. I caulked all of the window frames too and that helped. Now to get at the old floor furnace and get it cleaned and going. Small things help a lot...Don't forget those heavy curtains.

  • @timabbatiello8993
    @timabbatiello8993 Год назад +4

    I couldn't agree more and wish I had seen this video in 2005 before I built a new house and before I had to replace that unit in under 10 years and did so with another high efficiency unit which has given me more issues than any previous 80% furnaces I owned.

  • @mrfrostbite2020
    @mrfrostbite2020 Год назад +8

    I'm an HVAC contractor and I totally agree with everything this guy says, except he did not expand on the topic of service. The higher efficiency you want, greatly reduces the number of HVAC contractors who know how to work on it. High efficiency systems usually require advanced schooling or labs to know how to properly service, troubleshoot, and repair them...experience isn't enough. And most HVAC companies don't have the time to send their technicians to a school to learn how to service them.

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад +1

      This is so true in today’s industry

  • @frankhoward7645
    @frankhoward7645 Год назад +5

    I installed a Goodman high efficiency furnace 2 years ago. Why Goodman? Practically every other furnace can only be purchased through an installer and that means you have to pay someone to install it. When I was trying to decide which Goodman furnace to install, I discovered two things. 1. Like all furnace manufacturers, Goodman offers a standard 80% furnace and then they offer several efficient furnaces starting at 96% and going up at small increments like 97%, 98%. Each of these small increments cost plenty as they claim you'll be more comfortable if the furnace evens out the heat by fluctuating the gas supply or fluctuating the fan speed. This might be true, but I can tell you that no one in my family has ever complained about the heat not being even as our standard furnace turns on and off. Most people don't even notice when it turns on and off. Further, I consider these features to be more reasons for the furnace to fail in the future requiring hundreds of dollars to fix. 2. The initial purchase rebates available vary from state to state, but in Minnesota, I discovered that the rebates actually make it more expensive to purchase the 80% rather than the 96% so that's what I bought. The simplest high efficiency furnace. It doesn't turn down the burners and it doesn't vary the fan speed but who cares?

    • @pablopicaro7649
      @pablopicaro7649 Год назад +2

      Good Thinking

    • @WordofAdviceTV
      @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад +2

      @frankhoward7645 Thank you for sharing your insights and experience! I appreciate you explaining the reasons behind your decision making. I am sure many will find this helpful.

  • @blewidescorpio
    @blewidescorpio Год назад +8

    I agree. Company I work for is new construction and I’m having to service the 90’s a lot. There’s also things like builders go for aesthetic and cheap duct design but a lot of internal leaking, failing pressure switches, P Traps in attic flus which is bad install but still an additional thing to worry about

    • @HobbyOrganist
      @HobbyOrganist Год назад +3

      Probably a LOT of people forget to change the filter, Ive seen plenty of HVAC service videos showing the tech going to the customer's house for a no heat, and they check the filter and man oh man!! one I remember was BLACK, it had so much lint, dust and crap built up on it it was probably never changed and that's a big killer of heat exchangers and every other part in the furnace due to bad airflow

  • @100superaguila1
    @100superaguila1 Год назад +4

    Hey word of advice Im a big fan of your videos and just getting into HVACR, (I got 4 months in college so far)if you ever have the time can you please make a video regarding the sequence of operations for a hybrid ac system and for a heat pump system? I loved the video you made on the sequence of operations for a gas gurnace!

  • @nickazzarello6846
    @nickazzarello6846 Год назад +1

    Love your no bs videos! Glad I found them!

  • @jamesmonroe2808
    @jamesmonroe2808 Год назад

    Absolutely one of the very best RUclips's that I have ever watched and it 83 I don't have much time to waste. To sum it up in two words is common sense. Thanks so much.

  • @dgar7272
    @dgar7272 Год назад +7

    Thanks for your honesty. It makes sense . My Bryant 80% is 23 years old . Never a problem. I’ll get parts to a point if it fails.

    • @timrob0420
      @timrob0420 Год назад +1

      Extremely surprised you’ve never replaced the inducer on that, those things chew through inducers faster than any other brand

    • @dgar7272
      @dgar7272 Год назад +1

      @@timrob0420
      Never replaced anything. I live by San Francisco, so no extreme weather so far . I have cleaned the burners last year , and they weren’t very dirty either. I would take that brand again cause it’s my own experience. Thanks for your comment.

  • @danielkoon1016
    @danielkoon1016 Год назад +5

    Just a home owner but I had a guy trying to sell me a 95% furnace to replace the 90% furnace that came with the house when I was walking through the mall. His pitch was $6,800 for the new furnace including installation, taxes and fees. He told me it would save me an average of $200 ever heating season.
    explained to the salesman that would still take 34 years to recoup the $6,800. Which just doesn't make sense.
    The other salesman lost the potential customer he almost won over after he overheard my statement. Both salesmen packed up their little stand (didn't event rent a kiosk, just used a four foot folding table with cardboard displays) and left.
    The guy stormed

    • @WordofAdviceTV
      @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад +1

      @danielkoon1016 Thank you for sharing your experience along with the numbers. Much appreciated! It's good to hear that you immediately noticed how the "savings" didn't make sense.

  • @LARRY-mn5cx
    @LARRY-mn5cx Год назад +1

    Great video I have done apartment maintenance for 15 plus years and our older buildings had the 80% units and our new buildings had high efficiency units even the the high efficiency units are newer I work on them 4 times more them the older 80% units.

  • @iarchibald1
    @iarchibald1 Год назад +32

    I think a big factor is the region I live in. In a cold region where you'll be requiring heavy amounts of energy a high efficiency furnace is probably worth it and my state offers rebates to even the cost with a low eff unit. I could see this being true in Southern states where heat demand is low but I believe it's worth it in the north.

    • @jdmking4776
      @jdmking4776 Год назад

      Insulate your house better then

    • @danielroberts698
      @danielroberts698 Год назад +4

      I bought my house in 2012. We had a great working furnace. Then the next winter was coldest in history. I went thru 800 dollars of propane in 5 weeks. My house was built in 1980. It is fairly well insulated. I bought the high efficiency and it paid for itself in less than 5 years. I agree with you in most of all u say. In northwest Ohio it gets cold. I am happy with mine so far

    • @TroyHuffmanJr
      @TroyHuffmanJr Год назад

      Exactly.

  • @marklahiff4319
    @marklahiff4319 Год назад +5

    We just had a new 80,000Btu 96% efficient 2 stage furnace put in last August. To me, it's not all about saving money. The builder put a furnace that was almost twice as big as needed. That was 1988. It was an 80% 150,000 Btu unit. What is really important is comfort. With an oversized unit, it is never on. That means you freeze when it isn't really that cold out which is most of the time you need it. And it is impossible to get performance out of a humidifier when the furnace never runs. I think if you are in an area that gets down to 0 degrees Fahrenheit once in awhile, a little more expense for a two stage is well worth it for the days when it is 40-50 outside. If it cost $4,500 and lasts 15 years, that is only $300 a year. i pay 10 times that for the families cell phones. So far my gas costs have been 20-25% cheaper this winter.

  • @markallan9050
    @markallan9050 Год назад +3

    Couldnt agree more. I am a self employed plumber gasfitter here in canada but I cant buy mid efficients here so I tell people to stick with their standard or mid efficient furnaces. The high efficient furnaces are very expensive to repair and have a new variety of problems like vent pipes freezing off or acidic condensate rotting out cast iron drains. I have two 1974 inter city furnaces in my place and they are built to be bulletproof and when properly tuned up you can hit nearly 80% efficiency with them. Parts are readily available and break downs are few and far between.

  • @MatthJenks
    @MatthJenks Год назад +1

    WOA, you mentioned in another video that you like 2-stage furnaces. For most of us, we can't get a 2-stage furnace without going to a high-efficiency one as well. I enjoyed this video, but I have to take your advice selectively based on what's available from my local installers. Thanks for your videos, they're very to-the-point and easy to digest.

  • @peachyclean93
    @peachyclean93 6 месяцев назад +2

    You sir definitely know what you're talking about! That's why I'm still keeping my 80% 51 years old Miller furnace in my house! Well said!

  • @jraoul711
    @jraoul711 Год назад +3

    Thanks for this video. It's hard to find honest opinions online about condensing vs. Non-condensing units.

    • @stacywalsh4248
      @stacywalsh4248 Год назад

      Yes! Also, they make water, which is no bueno in freezing temperatures!

  • @larrys1185
    @larrys1185 Год назад +17

    Always enjoy and learn from your videos..I asked my father-in-law, many years ago if I should replace my furnace with the new hi efficiency or 80%...glad I took his advice that echoes yours.
    Minnesota misses you more than you miss us. Keep up the great work 👍

    • @WordofAdviceTV
      @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад +5

      Thank you for sharing good sir. Glad to hear your father-in-law had the same advice! Haha and thank you, Minnesota is a wonderful state but I must admit I do enjoy Hawaii more. 😇

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 Год назад +4

      That would a colossal mistake to not get a 95% in MN. Within 3 years easlily the cost would be made up in energy savings

    • @Honestandtruth
      @Honestandtruth Год назад +1

      @@WordofAdviceTV So What Brand name of Heating Furnace Or A/C brand name is to Buy❓❓

  • @rizabalanca2788
    @rizabalanca2788 9 месяцев назад +2

    I was looking at a new one right now. I love your comment. I'm gonna end up cleaning my old one out and just tuned it up good. Thank you new york

  • @robertvosburgh7540
    @robertvosburgh7540 Год назад +3

    I bought an 80% efficient furnace 2 years ago online. Had it delivered and did the removal and installation all on my own. Took out a bad goodman 80%, and installed a new 80% furnace. In total I paid $775 bucks. And I am totally satisfied

    • @Kiddro22
      @Kiddro22 Год назад +1

      Adjusting the gas valve settings is where I stop. I’m not a guru at it.

    • @robertvosburgh7540
      @robertvosburgh7540 Год назад +1

      @@Kiddro22 honestly that was the easiest part.

  • @thecasualrver
    @thecasualrver Год назад +1

    We just purchased a new high quality manufactured home, 2X6 walls, R-30 ceiling, R-19 exterior wall insulation, R-11 floors insulation, dual thermal pane winds and 1/2" interior drywall. I was disappointed at first it only had a 80% efficiency furnace, we live in SE Michigan, our condo we sold had an 96% efficiency furnace, the home square footage is roughly the same, believe it or not our natural gas bills are nearly the same. Thanks for this video.

  • @JohnHVACR
    @JohnHVACR Год назад +53

    I’ve been in the HVAC business over 20 years as a lead installer and I agree with what he said.
    Same goes for those condensers with higher seer, the basic ones have much cheaper and less parts that can go wrong and can cool your house efficiently as long as it’s well sized.

    • @pablopicaro7649
      @pablopicaro7649 Год назад +2

      Lets Calculate: Savings of 95% over 80% for 35 year life of Lennox Pulse. $1000 year spent on Nat Gas with 95% so spent $35k in 35 years. Would need 19% more gas for an 80% (.95/.80=.19). So $35k * 19% = $6,650 saved over 35 years. NOT ONLY is there energy savings, but HIGH quality equipment last twice as long, so saves another $3k to install another one.

    • @JohnHVACR
      @JohnHVACR Год назад +8

      @@pablopicaro7649 35 years!? LOL , it won’t make 10, plus all the very pricey parts that you need to replace along the way, even if you are a great tech like me you still have to pay for the parts.
      I installed them since new, saw them along the way and at the end of their life. I’m talking about any brand.
      Real field experience here. ✌🏼

    • @milkywayandbeyond
      @milkywayandbeyond Год назад +1

      Which model would you recommend?

    • @boby115
      @boby115 Год назад +2

      @@JohnHVACR , I wish I didn’t have to agree with you but I do. The equipment over the past 10 or 15 years has been going downhill at a steady pace (leaking evaporators , plugged secondary heat exchangers, ECM motors lasting three years, problematic TXVs and now we’re abandoning 410 A). As far as the pulse furnace ,they started losing their luster when the recall came out on their heat exchangers manufactured between 1982 -1989 and stop manufacturing the pulse furnace completely over two decades ago. Lennox did stand behind their problems but they were problems nonetheless.

    • @WordofAdviceTV
      @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад +4

      @JohnHVACR Thank you for sharing you knowledge and experience John!! Much appreciated!

  • @doug995.
    @doug995. Год назад +10

    Same goes for hot water tanks, the old standing pilot natural draft tank will never let you down, even when the power goes out. Way cheaper in the long run.

    • @ohioplayer-bl9em
      @ohioplayer-bl9em Год назад +2

      I just replaced my water heater with the type. Why make things more complicated? Life is hard enough.

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад

      @@ohioplayer-bl9em because the government has their hands in it and feel it necessary to spend their energy budget on raising the efficiency standards. Its the government it’s doesn’t have to make sense. Lol

    • @aaronhumphrey2009
      @aaronhumphrey2009 Год назад

      You're right - no hot water during an outage..plus the electic motor adds to the electric bill + replacement parts offsetting any savings.
      Plus my area has hard water , so lime builds up at the bottom of the tank, slowly lowering the heating efficiency over time..buying a 20+ year warranted/ stainless steel water heater is pointless- it will get crudded up after 10-12 years ..

  • @binyammamo6454
    @binyammamo6454 Год назад

    I admire your knowledge!
    You are the best, keep it up!

  • @jeffboyles3611
    @jeffboyles3611 Год назад +3

    Thanks for this good advice. I'm on borrowed time with a furnace/AC combo from 1993. Good, tough old Carrier furnaces, but they're getting noisy and corroded. In Houston, furnaces don't get extraordinary use, but in my poorly insulated house, sure is comfortable when you need them.

    • @sprockkets
      @sprockkets Год назад +1

      In Texas no one should install a 95% furnace. It's for us who live up north.

  • @eacjones
    @eacjones Год назад +9

    If you have 5 or more months of winter you should go with the high efficiency. If you have 3 months of winter, or more mild winters, go with standard efficiency. Definitely speak with your trusted HVAC company and see what options and prices are best for you and your area!

    • @Kiddro22
      @Kiddro22 Год назад +1

      The key phrase….”speak with your TRUSTED hvac company”….

  • @bigc8300
    @bigc8300 Год назад +7

    I will soon be coming up on my 30th year in HVAC. I totaly agree with you .

    • @WordofAdviceTV
      @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад +1

      It means a lot coming from a veteran tech, thank you!!

  • @harold5560
    @harold5560 Год назад +2

    Now I’m nervous! I’m actually pretty happy with my new high efficiency propane boiler, we installed last year.
    It heats up each zone way faster compared to my previous (oil) furnace, and I’m paying roughly 200 bucks every 3 weeks for propane ,whereas some of my neighbors are paying over 900 a month for oil, and natural gas is not cheap right now. Also, I no longer have to keep the house temps around 60 degrees to save fuel.

  • @frankjgornickjr3676
    @frankjgornickjr3676 4 месяца назад +2

    You're 100% right older furnaces that had thermocouples blasted 40/50 years and you didn't have condensation tubes leaking into your furnace. It was a hotter heat. I believe my parents were scammed years ago they said it had a small leak crack and ever since then between 8 and 10 years the furnace has to be replaced meanwhile the old one lasted for 40-something years. The old ones worked far better. Thanks for telling the truth.

  • @stevehowe209
    @stevehowe209 Год назад +5

    My home is 20 years old. Installed a Lennox high efficiency variable speed A/C and furnace last year. Love it! Home is more comfortable in summer and winter. No more hot or cold spots in the home no more constant adjusting the thermostat temperature. Significant lower electric and natural gas usage as well. If you’re looking to get a ROI from any furnace, get a wood 🪵 burning stove.

    • @Kiddro22
      @Kiddro22 Год назад

      I’ve been looking for a 90% efficiency wood burning fireplace insert. But these prices for the inserts are highway robbery with a date rape combined.

    • @Priority57
      @Priority57 5 месяцев назад

      Love the high efficiency furnance.. I can tell big difference with no more temperature spikes. The temperature is always constant.

  • @andreeriner811
    @andreeriner811 Год назад +11

    I definitely get your point, but it depends on a lot of things. I normally will install about a 92 percent Goodman, or sometimes an ICP product. With the Goodman I’ve had almost no issues at all and I’ve got some out there that’s been in many years. So far I’ve not had any with an ICP but to be fair I don’t have any out there that’s been in long enough for me to say the same thing. I absolutely agree about some of the fancy bells and whistle ones, but Goodman are pretty straight forward not hard to work on, and I’m not trying to endorse Goodman, lol, I’ve just been a dealer for a long time and that’s what I was selling. Albeit, I’ve been installing Goodman for oh my many years I’ve been doing this since 1988. Anyway, God bless good vidio keep it up.

    • @Pepe-dq2ib
      @Pepe-dq2ib 3 месяца назад

      Dont buy Goodman, its not even American owned.

  • @Kangenpower7
    @Kangenpower7 Год назад +2

    My niece has a 1965 78% furnace installed by the builder! Just keeps running! No inducer motor, no glow coil, just a pilot.
    I worked on a 1929 home with a Bryant gravity furnace, and the casting said Bryant Beverly Hills California. The furnace was located in Long Beach CA. Remember back in 1925, Beverly Hills was a farming community.
    Back in 2009, I replaced a indoor fan motor on a Singer high efficiency packaged unit, and the motor cost was over $600, so the customer paid over $850. A normal unit would only cost about $200 or so.
    When I installed a air conditioner for my sister, I wish I had put in a heat pump. It would use a lot less expensive electricity most of the year to heat her home, not the expensive natural gas. My brother uses propane out in the country, and I might recommend installing a heat pump in his home, once the A/C fails, maybe sooner?
    To get 100,000 Btu's of heat, you could run a heat pump for about 5 to 8 KW, or run a electric heater using 23 KW, or burn about 1.1 gallons of propane in high efficiency furnace or 1.2 gallons in a 80% model. Usually the 8 KW heat pump is the least expensive mode! A gallon of heating oil is the very most expensive way to heat a home these days!

  • @kingssing
    @kingssing 9 месяцев назад +2

    This man is being totally up front and honest ! go with the 80% for parts availability and cost when you do need them . Most contractors try to push the high efficiency units and charge a lot more. not cool

  • @db4239
    @db4239 Год назад +23

    After retiring I wanted the best, installed 98% and 21 SEER. As natural gas price doubled, I really don't notice it, in the summer I can run my A/C during demand response utility increases and don't notice that either. I paid upfront to avoid concerns over my utility bills and so far am very happy with my choice. My equipment has a ten year warranty and lifetime heat exchanger. Hope I live that long! Thanks for your video!

    • @john6350
      @john6350 Год назад

      My opinion also

    • @brightonmusic
      @brightonmusic Год назад +2

      What brand offers you a Lifetime on the heat exchanger?

    • @apprenticephil649
      @apprenticephil649 Год назад +1

      Just so you know SEER is a made up number

    • @billking772
      @billking772 Год назад +3

      @@brightonmusic Amana has a lifetime heat exchanger warranty. Not sure if it's for their entire lineup or select models.

    • @Bryan-Hensley
      @Bryan-Hensley Год назад +2

      You should have installed a heatpump. Absolutely nothing is cheaper heating. A 21 seer heatpump only increase the heating efficiency less than 2 on the hpsf over a 15 seer. You need to get the gas furnace taken completely apart every 2 or 3 years because the secondary heat exchanger gets lint built up like an evaporator and will melt the AC coil due to the heat rise due to the lower airflow. I charge $800 to $1500 to clean one. The inverter board is $2,500 if it fails. The parts aren't universally stocked meaning you might be left without heat or ac for a month or more waiting on the warranty parts. These aren't very popular and parts are way too expensive for the distributor to have sitting around. Virtually everything is special ordered. I've replaced around 5 condenser boards in the past 3 weeks in some inverter heatpumps because we had rolling blackouts that killed them. An out of warranty blower motor is about $1000 vs $225 for a 15 seer. The condenser motor is around $300 to 500 higher. The internal board is about $600 vs $50. The expansion valves fail quite often on the 18 plus seer. Costs $600 to replace labor, possibly $1000 more for freon (freon isn't covered under warranty) depends on the factory requirements, $400 if the expansion valve is out of warranty. You better get rid of it in ten years.. seriously. Oh yeah, some factories requires the warranty part sent back before they'll replace it on those high end units. I've been doing this work since 1988. Own a HVAC company for 21 years.

  • @lar4305
    @lar4305 Год назад +3

    I replaced our 40 yo furnace with an 80% payne. It uses a lot less gas than the old one. When it was time to upgrade to this one the heating company salesman told us not to get the high efficiency one, get the 80% . so we did and he was correct. The gas bills are $100 less a month with this one.

  • @lukebraz7523
    @lukebraz7523 Год назад +2

    Good point, although I am very satisfied with my Lennox G26 High effciency I installed in 1995, on Propane, and never replaced a single part, also the blower motor has been running 24 h/day since installed. and as far as I know most G26 I installed are still going strong.
    Gaztech.

  • @n9wox
    @n9wox Год назад +2

    Normally, I wouldn't take furnace advise from someone living in Hawaii, but knowing you had lived in Minnesota, makes all the difference.

  • @stephenspademan5146
    @stephenspademan5146 Год назад +3

    I completely agree with your video. In 2009 80% efficient furnaces were no longer around to be sold in Canada.
    We have been getting hosed ever since. The next evolution will be to phase all gas-fired furnaces out and replace them with heat pumps.
    A single stage condensing furnace is the cheapest option in Canada for a furnace repalcemt

    • @jeffambrose7539
      @jeffambrose7539 Год назад

      I still don't know how they will phase out gas since heat pumps don't really work beyond -20C. Maybe Trudeau knows! Lol

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад

      Yeah it’s a shame we’re on the same path here in the lower 48 we’re coming to the end of our units with psc blower motors and they’re push hard for the heat pumps.

  • @OneManParade
    @OneManParade Год назад +7

    I 💯 percent agree. The same reason I would never get a tankless water heater.

    • @mrfrostbite2020
      @mrfrostbite2020 Год назад +2

      Tankless water heaters don't fit entirely in the same conversation. I like tankless because they're so small and can fit just about anywhere. It's worth the cost if you're trying to free up closet space or garage space. And, I don't have to worry about my family taking up all the hot water from their showers by the time I get home and I'm the last one to shower. Tankless water heaters are more expensive I'll give you that, but they do last a very long time and You don't have to kneel or lay down on the ground to service and repair it if it needs it like you do with a big water heater.

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад +3

      Let’s not forget about the maintenance on tankless water heaters and especially descaling them annually.

    • @OneManParade
      @OneManParade Год назад +1

      @@mrfrostbite2020 How much space are you really saving? Space for a couple of suitcases at the most.

  • @6121819
    @6121819 Год назад

    Thanks so much for your input. I feel much better now about not upgrading my currently working trane system from 2006.

  • @rolandsingh
    @rolandsingh Год назад +1

    Thank you Immensely, for this Video. I was completely unaware of the fact that a high efficiency furnace contains two
    Heat Exchangers. I shall definitely purchase the Standard type furnace, when the time comes to replace our unit. I have
    subscribed to your Channel. Roland Singh, Canada 🇨🇦

  • @billriga2825
    @billriga2825 Год назад +3

    In 2006 the installer gave me the option of installing a high efficiency 90+ or an 80+ efficiency furnace, I opted for the 80+ Goodman. Over the years I have had to replace a flame sensor, draft induced motor and a run capacitor for the furnace motor. I also replaced the run capacitor for the AC condenser. All parts were readily available on Amazon and were very ease to diagnosis with a multi meter and install. Very glad I got the 80+ and not the 90+. I totally agree with you, great videos appreciate it. The furnace is running great at 17 years old.

    • @timrob0420
      @timrob0420 Год назад

      Thanks for supporting the monopoly that is Jeff Bezos

    • @Kangenpower7
      @Kangenpower7 Год назад

      When I worked for a contractor, we would charge are diagnosis and sell a A/C compressor capacitor for about $75, and about .5 hour labor for a total cost about $187. Your amazon capacitor is only about $20, so a great job saving money!

  • @roberts1159
    @roberts1159 Год назад +10

    Totally agree with all your points about high efficiency furnaces. Currently have a Trane 80% natural gas furnace that is 20 years old and still running good. Has the original ECM fan motor and only replacement parts are the hot surface igniter and flame sensor. I changed those out just as preventative maintenance items. I have heard from a few other RUclips people that 2028 is what they are hearing regarding end of 80% furnaces. But never heard what their source of information was.

    • @terrorballz
      @terrorballz Год назад +3

      I got approx 26 yrs out of 80%Trane installed 1992. Replaced before breakdown because I got a few unexplained error codes Fall/Winter 1991. The HVAC guys could not find what triggered the code. Nor could they repeat it. So to be safe I bought a new 80% about 3 yrs ago. No issues other than Nat Gas costing so much more now. Heating bills during winter are $40 to $50 more a month now.

    • @pablopicaro7649
      @pablopicaro7649 Год назад +3

      Lets Calculate: Savings of 95% over 80% for 35 year life of Lennox Pulse. $1000 year spent on Nat Gas with 95% so spent $35k in 35 years. Would need 19% more gas for an 80% (.95/.80=.19). So $35k * 19% = $6,650 saved over 35 years. NOT ONLY is there energy savings, but HIGH quality equipment last twice as long, so saves another $3k to install another one.

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад +1

      @@pablopicaro7649 😂you must be a salesman

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 Год назад +1

      If its a 80% when new, its loses efficiency the older it gets. So in reality, you actually have a 65-70% finance now after 20 years.

    • @srobeck77
      @srobeck77 Год назад +1

      @@terrorballz quirky problems like that is usually a bad circuit board ($300), very easy to do yourself

  • @pgb1913
    @pgb1913 Год назад

    Excellent review!! Keep up the great work!!

  • @zipperdingo6385
    @zipperdingo6385 Год назад

    Amazing channel, value contents, and a lovely dude behind it

  • @jesvans
    @jesvans Год назад +2

    1 1/2 winters now(1/2 through this one) i replaced my always problematic 80%. i replaced it with a Goodman 80%, cost $500 new, i put it in myself. i completely agree with what you say. the old one was 80k btu, the new one is 60k and it works just as well

  • @standard9850
    @standard9850 Год назад +7

    I completely agree with your viewpoint on this. And on top of that, the performance and cost-savings claim for the high-efficiency system seem to be over-rated. We recently installed 98% modulatiing furnace and variable-speed air conditioner - both of them top-of-the-line products from Carrier - to replace our 26-years-old system. Right after the installation, we noticed that we were not getting the savings in gas usage that have been promised but didn't think too much of it. Now after close to a year and in winter months, we are not again seeing any benefit at all of our investment (the system was $10K more expensive than the ones from standard grade) and are quite dissatisfied with the performance of supposedly the top-of-the-line products.

    • @sprockkets
      @sprockkets Год назад

      You need to tell us if you had an 80 percent before that - remember that a communicating setup alone is very expensive, which has nothing to do with the 98% part. Just the thermostat for a Goodman modulating furnace is $800.
      You were better off just getting a 95% furnace without the communicating part. And if you have a greenspeed unit, you probably are using the heat pump to a degree since all of them are heat pumps for their variable speed equipment.

    • @standard9850
      @standard9850 Год назад

      @@sprockkets That is true.. Yes we had an 80% system that was 26 years old before. That system was working just fine until cracks developed in the heat exchanger, and we had to replace it. We are in the process of having our modulating system returned for a refund now. Carrier does have a 100% satisfaction guarantee policy in place where they allow homeowners to return the system for a refund within 1 year of installation. We are still waiting for more information from them so we can make the right decision and the process is slow, but we will see how it goes.

  • @MrCheezeus
    @MrCheezeus 11 месяцев назад +2

    highly agree with the old furnace part, I've worked on 40 year old Thermo Pride oil burners still in great shape

  • @texomatinker414
    @texomatinker414 Год назад +2

    I had a top of the line Trane installed 10 years ago. It has been a learning experience. The first lesson came when the drain to the outside froze and shut the unit down during an ice storm. I still need to run the drain to a vent stack on the wastewater system to keep that from happening. I've had to thaw it out twice over the years and that is never fun in bitter cold. I keep it insulated and have a heat tape on it, but sometimes that just isn't enough. Last month the unit quit heating and the problem turned out to be the main board. Thankfully it was still in warranty, but it took three days to get one and have it installed..
    I initially thought I'd like the programmable thermostat so I could just set the temperature and forget it. However, the spread needed between the heating and cooling temperatures just doesn't work for my situation. The wife likes it cool, and we care for my mother (95) who likes it warmer. So, I don't set the thermostat to Auto. I just set the temp for the same in all periods and switch from heat to cool as necessary. I put a space heater in mother's room, and a window unit in our bedroom (where my wife spends much of the day on the computer). They can both close their door and keep the temp they want, and the central unit doesn't run much during moderate weather. It's a crazy way to do things but at least I don't get too many complaints.
    Bottom line: If I have to replace the unit, I'm definitely planning on going the 80% route. Of course, there is talk now about banning gas appliances and that could change things considerably. I've got lots of wood and will probably purchase a high efficiency wood furnace and tie it into the system.

    • @MK-xl9tt
      @MK-xl9tt Год назад +1

      Yes your installer should have known not to vent the furnace condensate to the outside it would freeze. If this is an attic installation an 80% would be a less problematic option as there’s no condensation produced in heating mode.

  • @danielesilvaggi
    @danielesilvaggi Год назад +9

    Wow it is good to see how many people agree with you. I have had old furnaces for a long time and they are very easy to repair, then installed a new high efficiency and had nothing but problems since day one. The pressure switch for 1 has been an ongoing issue. Then the inducer motor went. Luckily I installed and fixed these myself or it would have been a lot more expensive. Thanks for the video.

    • @BeaverZer0
      @BeaverZer0 Год назад +3

      Depending on where you live, a high efficiency furnace might save you a couple hundred $ /year. I have gone over a decade with no issues, this means I might have saved as much as $2k in gas.
      Easily paying for more than one repair if I had one.
      I mean heck, they come with 10 year parts and 20 year heat exchanger warranty.

  • @inspectorray8795
    @inspectorray8795 5 месяцев назад +6

    Remember, there may be a hidden cost. When replacing a conventional gas fired furnace you will remove it from a chimney that it shares with a gas fired water heater... thus orphaning the water heater on a flue that is too large to serve only fumes produced by the water heater in winter. The furnace that is now not using the flue use to keep the flue warmed in the winter so the fumes from the water heater will rise up and out. Now you have a situation where you need to do somthing with the gas water heater such as replace it with electric.

    • @waterboggle36
      @waterboggle36 5 месяцев назад

      We install chimney liners for that very reason

  • @JPTech933
    @JPTech933 Год назад +2

    This is exactly right, I live in Montreal, Canada. All the HVAC companies are pushing high-efficiency, and service contracts. I understand why PROFIT.
    These direct vent super efficient gas and/or oil furnaces have all kinds of parts and sensors.. (just like new drive by wire cars ) if one sensor is off or one component fails no heat! Also as one furnace repair guy admitted to me, lots of small repairs and house calls at $50 a call, $130 per hour + parts, gives the main install/repair companies and their mandators (companies who pay to be official reps) a huge level of income. I think a combo of gas furnace for really cold winters, some electric baseboard for average cold and a fireplace for power failures, are a great approach to keeping warm.

  • @user-wm8vh9uq5d
    @user-wm8vh9uq5d 10 месяцев назад +1

    Very well presented.... Makes TOTAL since.... I appreciate the lack of bull/alarm in the content.

  • @jakejakeman4591
    @jakejakeman4591 Год назад +1

    As a self- employed HVAC guy I mostly disagree. At least with my pricing with York, the difference between 80% and 95% is only about $800-$1000. So you will get that money back very soon in my region in Utah, even with the default warranty of 5 years. But if registered, the warranty becomes 10 years.
    York part prices aren’t as expensive as carrier or trane either. Plus my overall repair price is better than most companies anyway. Of course this is all dependent on my company and pricing of course. But that’s mostly my point. I run my business fair and honestly.
    Addressing the reliability issue, in my experience it has slightly more to do with how well it was installed, but more complexity does play a role. Any well taken care of furnace is capable of lasting more than 15 years in my opinion.
    Also one huge point I have is if there was a previous furnace that was 90%+ efficient in the house, it makes so much more sense to match the 90%+ when doing a changeout. Otherwise you would have to run a metal flue which can only vent through the roof. Most of the time that’s not even an option to do.
    The one place I do agree is with anything higher than 95% (according to my prices) they are too expensive for only a few percentage points higher. You won’t ever ROI on those. And modulating furnaces are a nightmare to repair and diagnose.
    In your favor, 80% totally makes sense with attics, rentals, people who don’t have a way to run pvc flue, or simply people who have a tight budget. I say go for it in those cases. I am also against the tactics some companies use to upsell.

  • @anthonyspadafora1384
    @anthonyspadafora1384 Год назад +5

    First of all you lumped variable speed inducers with high efficiency furnaces. That is not the case with your standard 95% furnace. Inducers are the same price and they have no more electronics than an 80%. The only difference between the two is the secondary exchanger and the need to dispose of the condensate. Next, If your home was built after 2000 you probably don't have a chimney so an 80% is not even an option. Last point, High efficiency units bring in outside air for combustion and have nothing to do with the air you breath. They do not add to the negative pressure inside a home already aggravated by kitchen vents, bathroom exhaust fans and clothes dryers. Why would you use air that you heated and humidified for combustion?

  • @shanefrank3281
    @shanefrank3281 Год назад

    I agree. An installer put a high efficiency in my attic. 2 times I have had the condensate line freeze and cause leaks that damaged my ceiling. So now I am in my attic installing heat tape and better insulation on the condensate line to prevent this in the future. When the heat tape comes on (below 37), it will be consuming around 200W of electricity. So that likely wipes out any energy savings on gas.

  • @jubuxa655
    @jubuxa655 8 месяцев назад +1

    Hi Jay, great video, thanks for educating us. I'd like to know your opinion on my case: i live in Canada , canadian winter -10 to -12 degree Celsius is common (could be much colder). My present furnace is 30 years old and is still working fine. I plan to replace it not because want to upgrade to high efficiency one but more because of its aging, because concerning if it died this winter i would be stuck in cold for few days while waiting for a new one. A furnace tech took a quick look and said my present furnace is 60% efficient,...more comments... (not quite understand) . I was given some options for a new furnace:
    (A) Rheem R96V (2-stage variable speed) or R96T (2-stage constant torque),
    (B) KeepRite G96CTN (2-stage variable speed) , or G96VTN (2-stage constant torque) ,
    (C) Lennox ML296V (2-stage variable speed) , EL296E (2-stage constant torque)
    1) I will take your advice keeping my present till it ends.
    2) If it ended this year which of the above brands should i pick?
    3) Should i go with 2-stage variable speed, or 2-stage constant torque. All three above are up-to 95% effficient. Or should i stick with single stage furnace 80% as you mentioned? which of these is suitable for my house with long canadian winter?
    4) My house is about 2,500 sq ft, should i go with 60K, 70K, or 80K input BTU? Different furnace techs. give me different BTU. Thanks

  • @dankelley9361
    @dankelley9361 Год назад +8

    Thanks Jay for this great video! Just like most things, you have to thing of the payback when considering if the initial cost is really saving you any money. If companies would give you a 10 year warranty on their much costlier devices, they would then have some skin in the game & make them last longer like the more conventional furnaces.

  • @longjohn526
    @longjohn526 Год назад +4

    I still think the most bang for the buck is a 2-stage 80% like the 16 year old Bryant I have. It seldom kicks into high unless it's below zero and the only repair so far was replacing the flame rod 3 years ago and at the same time I got an extra hot surface ignitor so if that does go out in the middle of the night in January I can change it in about 15 minutes and go back to bed.

    • @tsgt2007
      @tsgt2007 2 месяца назад

      I just replaced my Heil 80% efficiency 1 stage furnace with a 2 stage 80% efficiency Lennox. I hope it will last at least 20 years.

  • @stacymilligan5761
    @stacymilligan5761 Год назад +1

    Thank you young man for dropping that science.

  • @user-wj5mb7ol6v
    @user-wj5mb7ol6v 3 месяца назад +2

    One item you forgot to mention. The 90+ has 2 heat exchangers that add pressure drop to the air moving fan. This increases the watts used every time the blower runs. So in the south where you are running AC a lot the 90+ will actually cost you more to run over the year.

  • @ritchpoint
    @ritchpoint 9 месяцев назад +3

    Well explained in a simple language. High efficiency is a no go area . Parts and Technicians will milk you dry

  • @danp6101
    @danp6101 Год назад +3

    I have been telling my customers this for years.
    Unfortunately they usually end listening to their neighbors and suffer in long run.

  • @stevencossaboon3237
    @stevencossaboon3237 Год назад +2

    Great video. Your opinions make a lot of sense.

  • @garyradtke3252
    @garyradtke3252 Год назад +1

    My house was built in 1963 and had a 200,000 BTU furnace that started life as oil, converted to propane, then to natural gas when it was available. It had a belt driven blower that we ran constant and was the sound was only noticeable when the house was completely silenced. In 2001 I replaced it with a 90% 100,000 BTU furnace. I sold the house in 2011 and spent more on repairs than I could have ever saved even if the price of gas doubled. The old furnace was 2-2.5 times physically larger and that was the only gain in the trade. The new furnace blower was a direct drive and was very loud and annoying. The furnace was in the basement garage of a solid masonry house. No wood structure including the main floor. The 90% furnace did the job very well and possibly kept up better than the old 200,000 unit in really cold blowing (below zero) weather but at a much greater overall cost. I was told the old furnace was probably only 30-40% efficient if that much so that would explain why the 90% with lower input performed better. I also had installed a new gas water heater at the same time. I replaced the gas valve 3 times because of a flame sensor failure that was built into it and not replaceable. The 4th time I replaced the water heater. That high efficiency water heater cost me $2,200.00. As far as conserving energy? What was the energy cost of manufacturing and shipping the replacement parts and new heater and the energy used by the HVAC shop to perform the work? In a nut shell, there is no dollar, energy, or climate savings anywhere in my experience. Only space saving in the house.

  • @donhgr
    @donhgr Год назад +3

    My guy talked me into a 80% and said with my size of house 2000 sq ft didn’t make sense and happy with my choice after a few years

  • @scpatl4now
    @scpatl4now Год назад +11

    My downstairs furnace is a Rheem 80% that was installed with my house in 1995 and it works great. I take care of it and change the filter regularly. Other than having to clean the flame sensor pretty much every year (thats pretty easy), nothing has gone wrong. My upstairs furnace is a year old and I went with the same 80%. I got that because the crappy Lennox A/C condenser unit went bad (friends don't let friends buy a Lennox), and it was cheaper just to replace both at the same time. The new one is also a Rheem (which is what I would get if you get a new furnace)

    • @ranger178
      @ranger178 Год назад +3

      my 1999 Lennox air conditioning unit is still running perfectly it is just a 14 seer 2 1/2 ton unit with scroll compressor no variable speeds or anything only maintenance i do is wash unit with a hose once in a while and change air filters but i put in a oversize return air grill for larger filters to get less strain on blower.

    • @scpatl4now
      @scpatl4now Год назад +3

      @@ranger178 The Lennox units that were built after 2007 are the ones that are bad. They use an aluminum copper coil that is inferior in quality and generally fail inside of 5 years (which is right when the warranty ends on that part), and they are still using the faulty coils even though there was a class action suit against them due to these defective coils.

    • @johnbielenda7336
      @johnbielenda7336 Год назад +3

      Never a problem with my 80%Rheem.......... any minor problems, easy and fast fix.

    • @pablopicaro7649
      @pablopicaro7649 Год назад +1

      Lets Calculate: Savings of 95% over 80% for 35 year life of Lennox Pulse. $1000 year spent on Nat Gas with 95% so spent $35k in 35 years. Would need 19% more gas for an 80% (.95/.80=.19). So $35k * 19% = $6,650 saved over 35 years. NOT ONLY is there energy savings, but HIGH quality equipment last twice as long, so saves another $3k to install another one.

    • @ranger178
      @ranger178 Год назад +2

      @@scpatl4now seems like all appliances are getting worse every decade they make them cheaper and try for planned obsolescence to last a little longer than the warranty even cars are getting worse since 1990s they were not selling enough new ones

  • @KRich408
    @KRich408 7 месяцев назад

    Great information , I just purchased a house that has an older Gas Boiler it looks to be about 15-20 years old. I was thinking should I just replace it after moving in to save in NG? It's an Old cast iron radiator system that was converted to a baseboard. They said the system froze in the past and cracked the radiators. I wanted to get a HE furnace because I can install it away from it's current location by the chimney. It's in a bad place for access the Gas water heater needs to be removed to get access to the furnace just because of the proximity of the chimney. But if the HE furnaces cost that much more to maintain/repair and can fail faster I'll be getting a standard unit. Pulling that 40 gallon water heater is not something I want to do ! Maybe a HE Water heater vented out a wall. So I can open up that space they are sharing now.

  • @jonn093
    @jonn093 Год назад

    thanks for this video, im in the HVAC field and i didnt think about it the way you described it in this video. i always try to save the customer money than try to sell them something they dont need cause i wouldnt want to be in their shoes.

  • @bigsky862
    @bigsky862 Год назад +9

    I agree completely
    I don't work on residential units I work on commercial roof tops units
    But the more complex the technology the more it will fail and cost to repair

  • @VolkerHenninger
    @VolkerHenninger Год назад +4

    Wish I’d seen this a couple of months ago. Just spent $12K on a high efficiency furnace and AC install.

    • @WordofAdviceTV
      @WordofAdviceTV  Год назад

      Sorry for being late but may your new units last you at least 20 years with very minor repairs!

  • @transparentglazier
    @transparentglazier Год назад

    I have an older furnace, we have lived her 25 years and it was here before we bought, it works fine, but I had to go to E-Bay to get some of the circuit boards because the local HVAC companies didn't/couldn't get those parts. Sadly all our appliances are about the same vintage and getting parts is a task. Good video and look forward to your other insights

  • @normchristopherson5799
    @normchristopherson5799 7 месяцев назад +2

    I have been in the HVAC industry steadily since 1973 so have a few years of experience upon which to base an opinion. I do agree with the views in this video but let me add that one of the biggest factors in the lifespan of any furnace is the quality of the duct system. I would say more than half furnace installations are short on airflow! Heat exchangers most often fail due to insufficient airflow. With the correctly sized furnace for the application, properly sized ducting and a quality installation I can envision nearly any furnace of any brand regardless of efficiency lasting more than 20 years.
    With that said, I am a big fan of high efficiency heat pumps also properly sized, applied and installed. I live in South Dakota, the Black Hills in particular where we can experience a large variation in temperatures from summer to winter. Heat pumps work well here and provide both heating and cooling. I love inverter driven compressors and ECM blower and condenser fan motors.
    As a fulltime HVAC instructor I really enjoy watching Word of Advice videos. Quality production, wise advice and well communicated. I point my own students to your videos as another learning resource.

  • @jamessteenburgh3150
    @jamessteenburgh3150 Год назад +3

    I bought a Bryant 96% efficient gas 2 stage condensing furnace, in my opinion it was the best money I have ever spent. My gas bill went from $130 a month down to $57 dollars a month in the winter time. That’s a huge difference. Also it has a 10 year warranty and a lifetime heat exchanger warranty. I think you need to be more careful on the actual brand you purchase, and also have a good installer. At the rate I’m going the cost will definitely recoup in the little extra I paid upfront for high efficiency! Also I got a $350 dollar credit on my taxes.

    • @brightonmusic
      @brightonmusic Год назад

      Does the Lifetime heat exchanger warranty include labor?

    • @jamessteenburgh3150
      @jamessteenburgh3150 Год назад

      Yes

    • @johnurban7333
      @johnurban7333 Год назад +3

      Same here. Got same type of furnace with same results and warranty. Very happy with it. The government is the only thing raising my gas bill.

    • @RogerPack
      @RogerPack Год назад

      What installation cost difference? Though I guess time will tell on maintenance cost?

    • @jamessteenburgh3150
      @jamessteenburgh3150 Год назад

      They have to run a condensate drain line and pump, no maintenance costs just have it serviced every so often and change filter often.

  • @jasonligo895
    @jasonligo895 Год назад +9

    Great video! I have a 24 or 25 year old Lennox 80% that is clean and runs like a champ. I've been looking at getting the 96% variable stage unit from them and as much as I love the sound of the technology, I just cannot justify the expense, especially since prices skyrocketed over the past few years.

    • @yfdfireman2
      @yfdfireman2 Год назад +7

      My advice would be stay away from communicating variable speed. If you want high efficiency & price, you will be perfectly happy with a 90+ 2 stage system and a 16 seer AC. When you do the upgrade, insist on a quality Class 2 surge arrester on the furnace to protect the board and the ECM motor. When the installer puts it in, have them explain the sequence of operation and point out the parts like the igniter and flame sensor to you. Those 2 parts are something every homeowner should have sitting on a shelf next to the furnace and they should understand how to recognize a failure in each component. Good luck with your replacement furnace.

    • @jasonligo895
      @jasonligo895 Год назад

      @@yfdfireman2 Thank you! Great advice!

    • @skylerdylan1005
      @skylerdylan1005 Год назад +4

      I have a Lennox modulating furnace from 2009 that’s so far needed no repairs(knock on wood) The comfort and quiet of the units is amazing. Probably wouldn’t be able to go back to single or two stage units. That being said, they are more expensive and the energy savings won’t make up for it. I live in an extremely cold climate so having perfect temperature/humidity controls make it worth it for me.

    • @Kiddro22
      @Kiddro22 Год назад

      @@skylerdylan1005 Which model on that Lennox?

    • @skylerdylan1005
      @skylerdylan1005 Год назад +1

      @@Kiddro22 G71MPP. 14 years old now. I’m sure it will be a brutal repair bill when something does go wrong, assuming they even have parts for it.

  • @abazism
    @abazism Месяц назад +2

    I have been doing hvac-r for 25 years, and I agree with you.

  • @samuelg3586
    @samuelg3586 Год назад +2

    As an HVAC service tech, I agree 100% with this video