Electrical – How to test a furnace limit switch

electricalfurnace

When my thermostat reaches the desired temperature, the furnace fan shuts off briefly, then cycles on and off a few times. Several internet posts pointed me to the limit switch, which seems to make sense, so I replaced it. The new switch exhibits the same problem, so I'm not sure whether I got a bad switch or there's something else going on. Is there a way to test the limit switch to rule that out? If so, where do I look next? There seems to be a resistor inline with one of the limit switch leads, but I don't know what it's rated at.

The furnace is a 25-year-old Carrier. The model number and serial number are illegible, and I don't have a manual for it.

Best Answer

grab a multimeter and figure out what the normal operation of the switch is. it's probably 12 or 24 vdc. leave the multimeter hooked up and watch it while the system is off, operating normally, and experiencing the problem. the resistor is probably a supervision resistor, so there are at least 3 possible outputs from the switch: open, resistor load, closed/short.

you can then decide the best way to diagnose the problem.

once you know how it should be operating, you can, for example, remove the switch and short or open or use the resistor to trick the furnace in to thinking it is still hot and the fan needs to keep running. if the fan doesn't run properly, then you know the problem is not the limit switch.