Furnace repair in the south Salt Lake Valley comes in two varieties. The first is a legitimate diagnostic call: the furnace is not working, there is a measurable cause, and the repair is what the diagnosis supports. The second is a call that arrives after another contractor has already been out, condemned the furnace without documented evidence, and quoted a replacement that is not warranted by the system’s actual condition.
We see both regularly. The second is expensive for homeowners and profitable for contractors willing to skip borescope inspection and combustion analysis. Our repair process is measurement-first: we document what the instruments show before we quote anything. If the furnace needs repair, we say so and quote the repair. If it needs replacement, we say so and explain why, with the combustion analysis printout and borescope findings to support it. If it was condemned incorrectly by a prior contractor, we say that too, with the same documentation. The $89 diagnostic fee is the cost of finding out which situation you are actually in.
Before instruments come out, the technician reviews any available service history, notes the furnace model, serial number, and approximate age, and performs a visual inspection covering:
Every furnace diagnostic call includes a combustion analysis at steady-state operation using a Testo 320 Basic flue gas analyzer. The combustion probe is inserted into the flue gas sampling port (or through the draft hood on Category I appliances) after the furnace reaches steady-state operation, typically 3–5 minutes after ignition.
We measure and record:
Based on the fault codes and visual findings, we proceed to targeted component testing:
For furnaces over 12 years old, for furnaces producing elevated CO in the flue gas, for furnaces where the combustion analysis shows ambient CO in the return air, and for any furnace that another contractor has condemned on the basis of a “cracked heat exchanger,” we perform a borescope inspection of the heat exchanger.
The borescope (a flexible fiber-optic camera with LED illumination, 5.5mm probe diameter) is inserted through the burner access panel into each heat exchanger cell in sequence. We examine the full visible length of each cell: the burner end, the mid-section, and the outlet end where the cell transitions to the inducer section. We document each cell with still photos and video where findings support it.
What we look for:
The single most common cause of furnace “failure” calls we receive from October through February on condensing furnaces. The 90%+ AFUE Category IV condensing furnace extracts so much heat from the flue gas that the exhaust condenses into liquid water in the secondary heat exchanger, which drains through a condensate trap and drain line to a floor drain or condensate pump. In the south Salt Lake Valley, two factors accelerate condensate drain blockage: the 15–25 grains per gallon hard water that precipitates calcium carbonate scale inside the drain tubing and trap orifice over two to three heating seasons, and biological growth (algae or fungal biofilm) that develops in the drain trap’s standing water. A blocked condensate drain backs up into the secondary heat exchanger, trips the condensate overflow switch or the pressure switch (depending on the furnace model), and produces a no-heat lockout. The fix: drain clearing with compressed CO₂ or compressed air and a descaling agent. The cost: $45–$85. The misdiagnosis: pressure switch failure ($145–$220 parts and labor). We check the drain first, every time.
A furnace installed at SunCrest (6,200 ft) or Traverse Ridge (6,400 ft) without manufacturer-specified altitude derating runs rich — too much fuel for the available oxygen. The combustion products include elevated CO, soot, and incomplete combustion byproducts that deposit on the heat exchanger’s secondary surface, the flame sensor, the burner ports, and the condensate drain system. Over 3–7 seasons, the accumulated effects include: flame sensor fouling (frequent loss-of-flame lockouts), burner port restriction from carbon deposits (orange or rolling flame), and premature heat exchanger fatigue from the elevated flame temperatures produced by rich combustion. We have corrected altitude derate on furnaces installed by other contractors in SunCrest and Traverse Ridge as the primary service call — after the manifold pressure adjustment, flame sensor cleaning, and burner port inspection, furnaces that were “failing frequently” run cleanly through an entire heating season.
The high limit switch on a gas furnace opens when the supply air temperature exceeds the manufacturer’s set point (typically 150–180°F depending on furnace model). The most common cause in the south Salt Lake Valley is restricted airflow: a MERV 13 filter installed in a furnace cabinet designed for MERV 8 (total external static pressure above 0.8″ WC), a dirty blower wheel on an older direct-drive motor, or a duct damper that was closed during summer and not reopened. High limit trips typically manifest as a furnace that starts, runs for 8–15 minutes, shuts off on high limit, and restarts 20–30 minutes later when the limit resets. The symptom is consistent with several other failure modes; static pressure measurement across the air handler at the diagnostic visit identifies airflow restriction as the cause in under 5 minutes.
Certain furnace models in our service area have documented control board failure patterns that we track in our service records:
We have overturned condemnation quotes regularly — furnaces condemned by competitors without documented borescope inspection or combustion analysis that, on our diagnostic visit, had a clean heat exchanger, normal ambient CO levels, and a specific repairable cause of the presenting symptom.
Common patterns:
If you have received a condemnation quote and want a second opinion, our $89 diagnostic fee applies. The documentation we produce — combustion analysis printout, borescope photo record, static pressure measurements — is yours regardless of whether you proceed with any repair or replacement through us.
For furnace no-heat emergencies, second opinions on condemnation quotes, or standard diagnostic visits across Draper, Sandy, Bluffdale, Riverton, South Jordan, and Herriman, our licensed technicians are dispatched from Business Park Drive 24/7.