New furnace wiring method

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ivsenroute

Senior Member
Location
Florida
This is from Saturday's inspection of a row home (one of four connected to each other). I inspected all four and can tell the the landlord does not get work done under permit.

This is a brand new furnace installation.

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Which leads to this. Again, brand new furnace.
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ivsenroute

Senior Member
Location
Florida
It is not hooked to Tstat wiring. It is connected to the individual wires from the transformer. Tstat works but the wiring for that is bad too.
 

mdshunk

Senior Member
Location
Right here.
You suppose that he will get his future work inspected? :D
HVAC installers in PA have slipped under the radar for so long and so often, it will take years to get them on board.

Here's a brand new Trane condensing unit changeout where the existing UF from the disconnect to the unit was too short. No problem. They hacked a little bit out of the sheet metal and put it through the knockout (underneath) without a connector. The is probably a 5,000 condensing unit:

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This next one I see pretty often. They tapped on one side of the 240V feeder to ground for 120V for a condensate pump. You can probably see a scorch mark in the control panel too. They must have done it hot.

illegaltap1.jpg


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ivsenroute

Senior Member
Location
Florida
He's right, it is a boiler. As long as it holds water whether boiling for steam or circulating, it is a boiler. In this case, it makes steam.
 

iwire

Moderator
Staff member
Location
Massachusetts
I agree with Pete and Google seems to agree as well.

A furnace makes hot air.

A boiler makes hot water / steam.


That said, there is a lot of room for each area to call them what ever they want. :smile:
 

peter d

Senior Member
Location
New England
Probably so. To 99.99% of the world, a furnace heats air and a boiler heats water. Just seems weird calling a boiler a boiler if it doesn't boil water.

I guess New England is in that .01% then, because I've never heard those terms interchanged that way. Maybe you are talking about the general public but I'm talking about tradesmen. In that case were comparing apples to oranges, aren't we?
 

hillbilly1

Senior Member
Location
North Georgia mountains
Occupation
Owner/electrical contractor
Definitely HVAC guys work, they do it all of the time down here, I get to fix it when it fails, or when the homeowner see's it and knows it's not right. The POCO also installs water heaters here too, not very pretty.
 
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