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10-11-2005, 09:49 PM #1
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I have a Lennox G20Q2E that appeared dead. The 2 amp glass fuse was blown. I replaced it and the fuse remained good with no call for heat. Stat called for heat and the electric damper started to open then the fuse blew and the wall stat started to smell of smoke. I dont see many Lennox products and have seen none with a motorized damper. Is the relay board causing the fuse to blow or is one of the devices hooked to it loading it down? Why did the stat heat up so fast? Why does this natural draft unit have a motorized damper? thanks for any help!!!
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10-11-2005, 10:05 PM #2
You have a short somewhere on the 24vac side.
"If anybody can draw on the power, where do we put the meter?" - JP Morgan before pulling Tesla funding
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10-11-2005, 10:07 PM #3
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Lennox used a motorized damper to get away with selling a conventional furnace as a mid efficiency unit. (rated efficiency - 78% AFUE)
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10-11-2005, 10:16 PM #4
better call for service before anything else lets the smoke out
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10-11-2005, 10:18 PM #5
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seen a lot of theese units with bad heat exchangers. Could still be under warranty for the heat exchanger only.
Beware of advice given by some guy on the Internet.
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10-11-2005, 10:26 PM #6Originally posted by lynn rodenmayer
seen a lot of theese units with bad heat exchangers. Could still be under warranty for the heat exchanger only.
never saw bad heat exchanger on small one like this. never saw bad heat exchanger blow fuse either.LOL
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10-12-2005, 09:43 PM #7
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thanks for you input. I have isolated the board but the fuse still blows with a flash of a dead short even tho I checked every wire in the furnace and disconnected all the stat wires. The fuse protects the 24 volt supply but only blows when the R and W is jumpered. The relays switch the 120 volt devices so they should not be causing any trouble. Can the board fail internally in a way that it only pops the fuse when R W make? Does the relay board have a history of this on the lennox?
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10-12-2005, 09:46 PM #8
it could be the board. i tend to think there is a short to ground on w
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10-12-2005, 09:54 PM #9
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It most likely is a short on the 24V side. Some of those are difficult to find and can take quite a bit of time. You might also check to see if the damper is getting stuck and the motor is pulling high amperage. That probably isn't the case but I would still check it.
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10-12-2005, 10:42 PM #10
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the damper motor is 120 volt switched from a relay so it shouldnt load the 24 volt supply. The fuse pops so fast that its got to be a virtually dead short. But there are no dead or low ohms readings anywhere. thanks for the feedback. May have to get the board.
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10-13-2005, 12:05 AM #11
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First thing I'd do on this service call is inspect the heat exchanger. Just because you haven't found many cracks doesn't mean they weren't there. Read into that anything you want.Originally posted by t527ed
Originally posted by lynn rodenmayer
seen a lot of theese units with bad heat exchangers. Could still be under warranty for the heat exchanger only.
never saw bad heat exchanger on small one like this. never saw bad heat exchanger blow fuse either.LOL
Then if the heat exchanger was good, I'd look for the short.
First things first.Beware of advice given by some guy on the Internet.
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10-14-2005, 05:21 PM #12
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thanks for the help. unit has been scrapped due to age and low efficiency. never did find the short, removed all wires in and out of board, must have been the board
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10-14-2005, 09:19 PM #13Originally posted by vapourman
thanks for the help. unit has been scrapped due to age and low efficiency. never did find the short, removed all wires in and out of board, must have been the board
what replaced it??


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