I know my A$$ from a hole in the ground, I'm a caver.
Teacher also said the way to get amp load on electric furnace is to amp out both hot legs, ADD THEM TOGETHER,and then whatever.Point is, everyone screws up and I am scared to think of my future screw ups when I enter the FIELD, but a teacher at a reputable trade school with students paying $20,o00 plus who is so incompetent is inexcusable.The industry should step in to ensure future technicians know their %&^& from the proverbial hole in the ground. This is my last post on this thread.
I know my A$$ from a hole in the ground, I'm a caver.
Karst means cave. So, I search for caves.
karsthuntr.
So there cave man.How many trips DID it take to get out of the ground? <:}
41Gasman
You will have to ask my wife after I die. I can't get out because I keep going in.
Karst means cave. So, I search for caves.
You might be a hack if you measure a ac control circuit to ground. I can't believe that instructor would teach that! Another thing, make sure voltage is still present while the circuit is under load.
Technical schools.
We hired a few guys from U.T.I., we rename that school as Un – Trained - Idiots
Trane has been using contactors to switch heating elements forever, as did GE before Trane took over, so it is far from a new thing. It is very rare to find those contactors bad too.
Originally posted by grodan1
Fair enough. I'll check it out, but the contactors were not wired to the elements to be fair to me.My memory tells me these "sequencers had low voltage connections for the "load" of the switch, and separate connections for the power they were passing, but I will make sure.Limit switches don't have the same visual as sequencers, so I know I'm right.
Check it real close. There are units out there that have double pole limits that serve 2 heating elements. They have 2 sets of contacts in them with 4 wires going to them, and look almost like single pole heat sequencers. They are really limits though.
Generally a heat sequencer or contactor will not be wired directly to the heating element. They may be wired from the sequencer/contactor to a fuse link, then from the fuse link to the limit, then from the limit to the element. Some will be wired from the sequencer/contactor, to the limit, to the element.
I prefere to have them to be wired from one side of the line to the sequencer/contactor to the limit, then to one end of the heating element, then from the other end of the heating element, to the fuse link and to the other side of the line.
That way there are safeties that can kill both sides of the line voltage to the element if it fails and shorts against something.
Ummm, hate to break it to you, but you can't get the total CFM through a GAS furnace that way....Same instructor said you could get total cfm from a gas furnace by amping out blower motor and using formula amps x volts = watts x 3.413 = BTU'S and dividing TD x 1.o8 into those BTU'S!Insane.
Determining CFM through a gas furnace doesn't involve amps or volts at all, since you cannot calculate how many BTU's are being put into the air by doing any electrical measurement.
Really, you would need to know the CFM through the furnace to figure out exactly how many BTU's of heat were being put into the air anyway...
Manometers and fan data charts are your friends.
Some manufacturers have a chart where you can determin the CFM based on the TD and ESP of the furnace at certain blower speeds, but the charts, assume some varriables that may not be true with BTU per cubic foot of gas and altatudes that are different from whatever they tested at in the lab.
I have sent in my resignation from a technical school here ( been teaching night school for 4 years ). Am quitting because the school does not care about the students. The full-time day teacher is a person that uses only the overhead projector to teach from. Because of him, we were teaching a whole semester course for taking the refrigerant certification. Now he wants to teach an entire semester on electric heat. This course is set up for residential only. The first thing that he was teaching his students to do when checking refrigerant level was to take the outdoor temp & set for 30-35 degrees above that for condensing pressure. Told me himself that he has to 'teach the tests'.
Cannot continue to try & teach students with this kind of support.
A tech school is only as good as the teacher is.
And, oh yea, he has to be called the 'instructor'.