Originally Posted by
drtom4444
Trane has one of the best furnaces out there. I have been an HVAC mechanic for about 35 years and if the white powder is around the flue pipe it is most likely dried residue from condensation which is water mixed with acids formed when the gas is burning. This mixture reacts with the zinc in the flue pipe which is on the pipe because when there is something to cause such a reaction you want the reaction to take place with the zinc and not the steel. Zinc is used as a sacrificial substance because it is more reactive than steel, copper, or aluminum. In fact, there is a new product on the market to prevent corrosion to the AC coils that is a zinc "egg" with a hole through the center and cut in half in order to clamp it on the larger freon line. Electrolysis causes reactions, or corrosion when two or more metals are joined. The most reactive metal corrodes. Zinc is more reactive than aluminum, steel, or copper, in that order, so the zinc corrodes while the other metals are unharmed. Only when all of the zinc has corroded will the steel or other metals start corroding. So, what you see is natural and means things are working as they should. DrTom4444