Itâs January 5. The temperature is about to drop to -30 °C. And your furnace just quit. If you found this article searching for potential ways to temporarily fix your furnace, youâre in the right place.
At ProSolutions, weâre here to help out Edmontonians when heating emergencies threaten your home and family. When you call us we will be there as fast as we can.
But, there are some things you can do before you call or while you wait for your furnace repair technician to arrive.
We put this simple guide together to give you some essential tips on how to temporarily fix your furnace in an emergency.
These furnace DIY tips will not apply in all situations. They should only be done if you are comfortable doing them and assuming the risk that they potentially carry.
Jason Billey
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The biggest problem with a broken furnace is having your water lines freeze and burst. The damage can be catastrophic and could cost many times more than a furnace repair.
It depends on your home and the outside temperature. Typically we see it take about 12-24 hours with zero heat and a temperature of minus 20.
In colder temperatures, that time decreases quickly.
We asked our furnace repair technicians what the most creative (and effective) ways to keep a house from freezing with a broken furnace. These are all based on personal experience and things they have seen customers do that worked well for Albertaâs climate.
If possible, turn your furnace fan on so that air is circulated through the home still to get the warm air you are generating distributed.
WARNING: Do not attempt any fix or DIY furnace repair that you are uncomfortable with. Never work on gas lines, or internal components yourself unless you are a trained professional.
ProSolutions Team
Our temporary furnace repair solutions and DIY tips are broken into 3 different categories:
We humans are strange creatures of habit. We sometimes feel we have to double-check what we think is happening. Case in point â smells. Weâre unsure whether we do actually smell gas, and we wander around sniffing, wondering if our sense of smell is deceiving us. On top of that, we donât want to bother somebody for no reason. And besides, we have to get to work.
If you have any doubts at all about what your nose is telling you, call your gas company immediately and leave. If you are in Alberta, call ATCO at 1-800-511-3447
ATCO NATURAL GAS SAFETY
If your carbon monoxide detector goes off, turn on exhaust fans, open doors and windows and clear the house.
If you smell anything burning, shut down the furnace and the gas line. Check for any fire. Where appropriate, open exhaust fans, doors and windows to get rid of the smell.
And if you are in Edmonton Area, call us at ProSolutions for scheduled furnace maintenance, repairs and installations.
Heat kills furnaces. And to protect you from a complete furnace meltdown, there are many protections built into the furnace to prevent catastrophic overheating. These safety systems do sometimes fail themselves, and thatâs where we are going to focus.
Several things could have happened. Â Some you may be able to fix yourself. Others, call your local furnace repair contractor. See the 10 Most Common Furnace Problems you can DIY
If thereâs any thread of doubt that you can fix it personally, donât hesitate to get on the phone.
And by the way, before we go any further, if you smell gas, leave, and call the gas company as we stated above.
This is the first thing to check. Often times, simply cycling power will fix your furnace (at least temporarily).
If you donât have power, nothing works. Find your furnaces power switch and make sure it is on. If you have not already tried turning your furnace off and on again, you should try that as well.
This is an easy check. If the filterâs clogged, you wonât get proper airflow to the heat exchanger. This, in turn, causes overheating and shutdown.
Solution? Exchange the dirty filter for a new one and see if that makes a difference.
Thereâs a safety factor here. If your furnace gets too hot, a âhigh limitâ switch automatically shuts the furnace down. Your fire risk is virtually eliminated.
Itâs usually the batteries. Check them. If theyâre low, replace them. If the furnace returns to normal function after one hour, that was likely the answer.
If itâs not, and the thermostatâs the number one suspect, call ProSolutions.
If you suspect this may be your problem, first, turn off the power to the furnace. Remove the sensor and clean it, assuming youâre comfortable in doing so. You could use steel wool or something like a brillo pad. You could also use your sleeve, nor recommended if itâs your favourite sweater. You can even use a $5 bill (or a $100) that you wrap around the sensor and slide up and down. That works for a while, but eventually, you âpeel through the orangeâ and a minor repair, or routine maintenance is needed.
This is a problem with older furnaces. Newer ones have electronic ignition. A typical pilot light will burn blue. If, for some reason, it burns inefficiently, it will usually turn yellow. When that happens, the thermocouple recognizes a safety issue and shuts off the gas valve. It may also be that the gas valve itself is stuck.
You can usually relight the pilot light yourself based on the igniting instructions for your furnace model. If the problem is the thermocouple itself, youâll likely need ProSolutions to replace it. If the gas intake valve itself is faulty, we can replace that too. You may also find that dirt has built up in that gas valve, restricting the oxygen needed for the pilot light to work correctly.
If the furnace isnât venting properly through the exhaust flue, for safety reasons, a flue limit switch will shut it down. That flue can get blocked because of some animal or bird that managed to seal it up.
Here in Alberta, hoarfrost can completely cover the screen with icicles, blocking airflow of any kind. Obviously, the block has to be cleared, which you can often do yourself.
Diagnostics â thatâs the issue. You may well have the answer, but like going to your doctor, you need a professional to make or confirm your suspicions:
Houses are the producers of strange noises. A bang in the middle of the night and so often you never find out what causes it.
With a furnace â thatâs a different story. You may have grinding noises. Do they occur before the flame comes to life, or is it after? Could it be the exhaust fan? That fan clears any gas that could be lingering and cause a backfire. It could be a serious issue, and you need to call to resolve it.
If the furnace does backfire, this is no time to waste. Kill the power to the furnace, shut off the gas and call a company to come fix your furnace.
If you were on a regular furnace maintenance plan with ProSolutions Inc. or your preferred heating contractor, you probably could have avoided having to fix your furnace yourself.
Proper maintenance and furnace tune-ups are designed to catch problems before they happen as well as prevent parts from overheating due to dirt, dust, or other debris that could block airflow to furnace components.
Too many of us are notoriously lazy at preventive maintenance and not just with our furnace.
Weâve given you several scenarios as to why your furnace can quit on you. But there is one other thing you can try.
Sometimes, like our computers, modems and cell phones, a simple shut down and restart will solve the problem. Try it and see.
If itâs more than that, however, ProSolutions is just a phone call away.
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