CPD7209
May 28, 2009, 08:22 AM
I have a Bryant M/N 383KAV036070AGJA, S/N 3097A08913, Series G furnace with central air that is blowing the 3-amp fuse on the control board. The furnace has been serviced numerous times over the past two years for various problems by multiple service companies. The control board was even replaced by one outfit about two years ago at considerable expense, and ran fine for about a year. However, no one seems to be able to get our unit fixed for long before it stops running again.
The 3-amp fuse on the original control board also blew about eight years ago. The service man said that the "points" on a relay or switch needed to be burnished, and the fuse stopped blowing back then once he fixed that.
I replaced the old style wall thermostat with an automatic setback one about four years ago, and the new thermostat has worked fine since then.
We have lots of cats and dogs in our home, which create a lot of hair. A service man came two separate times this past winter to fix our furnace which had stopped working. He replaced the flame sensor (burned out) once, and cleaned a lot of hair out of the furnace on the second visit. He said that the hair had caused the furnace to stop working, and told us we needed to change the filter more frequently due to the animal hair chocking off the air flow, which we have been doing.
What would be causing the fuse to blow once again on the control board? Do we just have a lemon for a furnace, and should we have the furnace replaced with a more energy efficient one (our furnace was built in 1997 according to the service man)?
Please help us solve this situation. Thank you so much!
The 3-amp fuse on the original control board also blew about eight years ago. The service man said that the "points" on a relay or switch needed to be burnished, and the fuse stopped blowing back then once he fixed that.
I replaced the old style wall thermostat with an automatic setback one about four years ago, and the new thermostat has worked fine since then.
We have lots of cats and dogs in our home, which create a lot of hair. A service man came two separate times this past winter to fix our furnace which had stopped working. He replaced the flame sensor (burned out) once, and cleaned a lot of hair out of the furnace on the second visit. He said that the hair had caused the furnace to stop working, and told us we needed to change the filter more frequently due to the animal hair chocking off the air flow, which we have been doing.
What would be causing the fuse to blow once again on the control board? Do we just have a lemon for a furnace, and should we have the furnace replaced with a more energy efficient one (our furnace was built in 1997 according to the service man)?
Please help us solve this situation. Thank you so much!