01-13-2018, 10:40 AM
(01-13-2018, 06:24 AM)Rick_B Wrote: So I'm going to jump in here - we have Rheem equipment (natural gas furnace and AC) that is 20 years old. I have been considering replacing everything in an effort to get ahead of the surprise factor - equipment not working when it is needed. I recently had the annual inspection/tune up for the furnce and I asked the tech for an overall evaluatuion of the equipment. He indicated that the blower motor is pretty much on its last legs - he was seeing bearing gre3ase stqrtibng to spray out. He also felt the circuit board discoloration was an indication that it was marginal as well. He felt the heat exchanger was in good shape. So when does replacement make sense versus repair. The tech felt that it would be pushing $2000 to replace motor and circuit board/wiring harness - that is approaching half the cost of new.
Any thoughts?
A blower motor runs 50$ to 100$ and so does a control board for those older units. A new furnace runs $500 to $1500 depending on size, brand and efficiency. 2k for replacing those parts is way high but they want to make the same profit as they would on a total replacement. Anyone in the trades doesn't want to do the small jobs and they way over price them.
I absolutely hate the ecm motors. They are expensive and have a high failure rate. Many have start up failures as well. They will start to spin then shut down then it will reset and start up again. You can tell when it does this because the furnace will start to move air then the motor stops and vibrates the furnace because it stops so fast then the motor will restart normally. I have been in many houses and commercial and have heard it happen on all brands as they all use the same motors.
I will say that more efficient units will typically not lower your energy bills. The reason is that you will keep it warmer in the winter and cooler in the summer because you can now increase your comfort level without it costing more.