90%+ Furnace Install (Start to finish)

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 31 май 2024
  • Step by step high efficiency furnace installation from tearing out the old unit to start-up of the new unit.
    00:00 Power Source
    01:15 Disconnecting Gas/120v Electric/Return Duct
    02:35 Disconnecting Flue Pipe
    03:45 Removing Thermostat Wires
    05:01 Pulling Out Old Furnace
    08:45 Cutting Return hole in new unit
    13:26 New Unit Into Place
    14:00 Planning new gas/electric connections
    15:37 New Burner Switch
    17:42 New Outlet
    20:46 120v Wiring into Furnace
    21:42 New gas pipe overview
    22:30 Reconnecting Thermostat Wiring
    27:52 Furnace Condensate Drain
    33:01 Flue Pipe Connections
    37:25 Furnace Start-Up/Delta T Test
  • ХоббиХобби

Комментарии • 60

  • @ChaitanyaWagh
    @ChaitanyaWagh 3 месяца назад +2

    Loved your video. Did not even feel that it was 40 mins long. Easy step by step approach in installing the new furnace.

  • @roystorts6495
    @roystorts6495 5 месяцев назад +2

    I need more of your videos! For the way I learn you are the best on RUclips.

  • @wadebrink8149
    @wadebrink8149 Год назад +2

    Gotta love the F U screw lol. Another excellent video Mike. My favorite moment is Juan bucket sitting and texting in the back ground. 🤣
    C'mon Juan

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Год назад +1

      Ha! I knew someone was going to notice that. Time to watch the helper video again.....lol

    • @jamescollins8148
      @jamescollins8148 10 месяцев назад

      LOL I noticed Juan texting too! 🤣

  • @serenity6988
    @serenity6988 Год назад +2

    perfect installation sir. I do hvac for a living and Im impressed!

  • @JoeB3
    @JoeB3 5 месяцев назад +1

    Nice video, I will say the nest thermostat “can operate without a common” but have way fewer issues with the common hooked up.

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  5 месяцев назад

      Yup. I always hook the common up if there is one available, even if Nest says it's not needed.

  • @shalchang2438
    @shalchang2438 Год назад +1

    Great video, Thank you for putting out the video.

  • @jamescollins8148
    @jamescollins8148 10 месяцев назад +1

    Great job and video. The only thing I do differently is when making my connections is ground first, then neutrals followed by the line voltage conductors.

  • @schuldje
    @schuldje 7 месяцев назад +1

    Nice job. Thanks for the demo.

  • @iranorddemetreus8824
    @iranorddemetreus8824 6 месяцев назад +1

    Thank you mike really appreciated it

  • @Mysterio77928
    @Mysterio77928 4 месяца назад +1

    Awesome job👏👏

  • @sirzhirafff7154
    @sirzhirafff7154 5 месяцев назад

    There should be Automatic Heat Staging, when you set AHS from no to yes on a display, so you don’t need to put a jumper, it will change stage’s automatically. Of course, if you have that display on a your furnace

  • @avanders457
    @avanders457 8 месяцев назад +1

    Great video!

  • @seanomeirs8574
    @seanomeirs8574 11 месяцев назад +1

    Great video

  • @HVACCONSTRUCTION
    @HVACCONSTRUCTION 3 месяца назад +1

    Good demo

  • @daddygc5814
    @daddygc5814 Год назад +1

    Nice job

  • @ameliaterrell5974
    @ameliaterrell5974 Месяц назад

    Was looking at Goodman electric furnaces for a 374sq.ft. downstairs on a home built in 1905 that's wired for 220. Ripping out the old fuel oil furnace. The winters up here get down to -20degreesF and we've been using a small fireplace in the basement supplemented with a small electric radiator and propane wall heater on the first floor with no heat upstairs (but miraculously we stay warm). I noticed your hesitation for replacing a York with the Goodman; is York better? Thank you very much for showing this install any advice is greatly appreciated. 🙂

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Месяц назад

      I wouldn't say I felt hesitation, but more like indifference. I would consider both to be standard contractor brands and don't really think one is an upgrade over the other. But bottom line is going to be the quality of the install itself. If that's done right, you'll get the most out of either brand.

  • @jimw6991
    @jimw6991 8 месяцев назад

    Curious when you did the yellow jumper wire on circuit board you talked about thid being necessary to force blower to run at high speed when a/c is used. Is it safe to assume it was a two speed furnace and nowcwill be a single speed? I am wondering why the customer decided to not change thermostat(s) if that was only reason why the feature of a two spped blower couldn't be used.
    Do both heating and cooling modes utilize the low speed normally or just heating?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  8 месяцев назад

      You need more than different blower speeds to make a system truly 2 stage or multi stage. For AC you also need a staged compressor and for heating a 2 stage gas valve.
      This particular install had neither.
      In this case, changing the blower speed only effects volume of the system and the dehumidification factor. It will do very little if anything at all for efficiency.
      Typically, heating will be a lower blower speed while cooling is higher., hence forcing the unit to run with the jumper at higher speed for AC mode.

    • @jimw6991
      @jimw6991 8 месяцев назад

      @JerseyMikeHVAC Thanks for the reply. So in this case weren't you installing a furnace with two speed blower? Isn't the gas valve part of the furnace? For me the idea of a two speed blower furnace is to allow the furnace to run more or less continually on low speed as opposed to coming on full blast (loud) and run for short time and turn off. Short cycle isn't desirable. As far as a/c model would I be correct to assume desired is to have blower come on high whenever compressor was running?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  8 месяцев назад

      @@jimw6991 That is not what short cycling is. Short cycling is either a malfunctioning system that doesn't run a full cycle at all or an oversized system (like a 3.5 ton unit cooling an area only requiring 2 tons). On a properly sized system, changing blower speeds can increase or decrease cycle times, but all that really does is alter latent and sensible heat removal ratios. Lower speed will remove more humidity but run much longer cycles. Higher speeds will remove humidity too, but will bring down sensible heat faster. It's not short cycling.
      Again, blower speed does not make staging. Compressors and gas valves do. Blowers just compensate based on compressor or gas staging. The furnace didn't have a 2 stage gas valve. The AC didn't have a 2 stage compressor. Therefore it cannot be a 2 stage furnace. The higher blower speed could compensate for a 2 stage AC system (compressor), but this customer didn't have one.
      Blower speed alone is only rule of thumb for heating/cooling. You can run it at any speed you desire. For some customers comfort is priority. For other noise. For some energy efficiency, etc. Blower speeds are adjusted for these factors. A properly sized system will still work properly regardless of blower speed.

  • @marcusdarnell3348
    @marcusdarnell3348 5 месяцев назад

    Great video! I learned a lot. For the hose that hooks to the condensate trap for heating could you have used regular worm clamps if the manufacturer didn't provide clamps?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  5 месяцев назад

      Sure. I've had to do it myself a few times.

    • @marcusdarnell3348
      @marcusdarnell3348 5 месяцев назад

      Thanks

    • @marcusdarnell3348
      @marcusdarnell3348 5 месяцев назад

      I forgot to ask when you are installing gas piping is it easier to start from gas valve to manual shut off or from the manual shutoff to the gas valve?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  5 месяцев назад

      @@marcusdarnell3348 I work from both ends to a union.

  • @jamesjones6274
    @jamesjones6274 10 месяцев назад

    I’m still learning…could you explain to me again why the jumper on the board from thermostat was necessary?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  10 месяцев назад

      The blower is capable of running at a low or high speed based on temperature differences between room ambient and thermostat set point. If room is 74 and stat is set to 72, it can run at low speed for less power consumption without going full speed all of the time. If the temperature difference is higher the unit can kick into the higher second speed to meet the larger load.
      You need a 2 stage thermostat and condensing unit to do this, but you don't have to. You can just use a regular thermostat and condensing unit that run at one speed.
      Without the jumper from Y1 to Y2, the blower will only run at the lower speed all of the time and full cooling capacity will never be achieved. The jumper forces the unit to run at the higher speed so it will run at full capacity.

  • @smeltitdealtit6323
    @smeltitdealtit6323 10 месяцев назад

    Been doing straight coils and heat pumps for 15 years today I’m installing my first furnace any tips would be appreciated

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  10 месяцев назад +2

      Low voltage wiring is pretty much the same as straight cool. Just need the w terminal for heat.
      Crack a union or cap on the gas line for just a second with the gas cock open to purge air out. That will help prevent false starts on startup.
      Usually I do a delta T between supply and return. There's a sticker inside the unit that tells you your heat rise limit. Often between 35 and 65 deg F. You want your delta T between those numbers. Too high and you'll have to back off on the gas pressure at the gas valve inside the unit.
      If the PCB and blower allow for different speeds in different modes use red (low speed) off of blower for heating and black (high) for cooling. Or go through the menu to run heat at a lower speed than cooling.

  • @franknielsen3562
    @franknielsen3562 3 месяца назад

    How do you wire condensate pump up to shut air or furnace to shut off? Can you series the pump with the red wire from transformer if pump over flows

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  3 месяца назад

      Yes, wire in series between control board R terminal and thermostat R terminal.

    • @franknielsen3562
      @franknielsen3562 3 месяца назад

      Can you just series the red wire off the transformer, if you have 2wires on the red terminal. Thank You

  • @snakeeyes1649
    @snakeeyes1649 4 месяца назад

    You don’t need a trap on the coil condensation drain?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  4 месяца назад +1

      This is a positive pressure coil in a conditioned space. Don't necessarily need one, But 99% of the time I put one in anyway, Don't recall why i didn't on this one...its been a while.

    • @snakeeyes1649
      @snakeeyes1649 4 месяца назад +1

      @@JerseyMikeHVAC Thanks for sharing! Your video helped me out tremendously.

  • @xianli6488
    @xianli6488 Год назад +1

    Took one day

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Год назад +1

      We were done by 2!

    • @jimw6991
      @jimw6991 8 месяцев назад

      ​@JerseyMikeHVAC You make it look easy. I am confident I could easily do the work, but I lack knowledge of what could go wrong, what to check and verify, etc.
      Do you think hvac tech would be willing to come in and inspect, test a unit a homeowner like me installed before it is powered up and run the first time? My idea being I could save money doing the labor and pay for the technical knowledge part of the job, if that makes sense, but make certain before using the system nothing important got overlooked.
      Great video and nice install. I picked up a few tips.

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  8 месяцев назад

      @jimw6991 You may be able to find a guy but it's not likely going to be through contacting local hvac contractors. Very few companies will take on the liability.
      You'd be better off trying to find an experienced HVAC guy willing to moonlight a little bit to help you out.
      Local ad, ask around HVAC supply houses, that sort of thing.

  • @kennyw7453
    @kennyw7453 Год назад +1

    Just curious, no condensate neutralizer kit? Nice install

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Год назад +1

      There's no enforcement by plumbing inspections, particularly when its not discharged into plumbing and wastewater systems, so all I can do is recommend.

    • @MrCountmein3
      @MrCountmein3 7 месяцев назад +1

      @kennyw7453. That's funny you mentioned that. I just failed an inspection here in NJ. for not having a condensate neutralizer kit.

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  7 месяцев назад

      @MrCountmein3 where in NJ?

    • @MrCountmein3
      @MrCountmein3 7 месяцев назад

      @@JerseyMikeHVAC mine hill. But like you said it's going into a waste water drain so I'm unsure of the code for that

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  7 месяцев назад +1

      @@MrCountmein3 The acidic nature of the water can weaken and erode piping over time, and I would agree a neutralizer is definitely a good idea.