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Carrier 58HDX Owner's Manual page 2

Upflow/horizontal/ downflow high efficiency gas furnace

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Combustion
Air (Your Safety)
CARBON
MONOXIDE
POISONING
HAZARD
Failure
to follow
this warning
could
result in personal
iniury
or death.
All fuel-burning
appliances
must
be provided
with
enough
fresh air for proper combustion
and ventilation
of flue gases.
Some models
use air from the space in which
they are located,
and
other
appliances
in thesamespace
may
also
be
using
indoor
air for ventilation
and/or combustion.
New
materials
and methods
are being
used in construction
and
remodeling
which
result
in lower
energy
costs
for heating
and
cooling.
It may
also mean
your
appliances
may not be getting
enough
air for combustion
and ventilation
of flue gases. The use of
exhaust
fans,
freplaces,
clothes
dryers,
and
other
appliances
consume
air or vent it to the outdoors.
If the gas appliances
or heating
furnace
can't
get enough
air, two
conditions
may result:
1. The appliances
or furnace
may produce
carbon
monoxide
gas.
2. The appliance
may not vent flue gases properly.
The follow-
ing
are
signs
that
your
appliances
may
not
be
getting
enough
air for proper
combustion.
Be aware
of these signals:
1. Headaches,
Nausea, Dizziness
2. Excessive
humidity--heavily
frosted
windows
or a moist
"clammy"
feeling in the structure.
3, Smoke
from the fireplace
won't
draw up the chimney,
CARBON
MONOXIDE
POISONING
HAZARD
Failure
to follow
this warning
could
result in personal
injury
or death.
If you experience headaches,
nausea, or dizziness,
carbon
monoxide may be present. Leave the house immediately and
call your gas supplier.
Combustion
Air Checks
If any of the above
signals
are noticed,
perform
a combustion
air
check
or call
a qualified
service
agency.
If you
add weather
stripping,
storm
windows,
insulation,
an additional
fuel burning
appliance,
or remodel
the structure,
a combustion
air check MUST
be accomplished
after the addition.
Make
the
inspection
as follows:
1. Close all doors and windows.
If you have a fireplace,
start a
fire and wait until flames are burning
vigorously.
2. Turn on all exhausting
devices,
such as: kitchen
and bath-
room exhaust
fans and dryers
(gas or electric).
3. Turn
on all vented
gas appliances,
such as: heating
equip-
ment (includes
any room heaters)
and water heaters.
4. Wait ten (10) minutes
for drafts to stabilize.
5. On appliances
with a draft hood, check for spillage
by hold-
ing a lighted
match 2" (50.8 mm)from
the draft hood open-
ing. Reference
Fig.
1, which
shows
a water
heater
draft
hood.
Vent Pipe
/_,_/
Draft Hood
/
PN
Fig. 1 - Water
Heater
Draft
Hood
A07688
a. Match flame pulls towaM
draft hood.
This indicates
no spillage
and that appliance
is getting
enough
air for combustion.
Return
exhausting
devices
and appliances
to the condition
in which
you found
them.
b. Match goes out or flame
wavers away fiom
dr@ hood.
This indicates
spillage
and that appliance
is not getting
enough
air for combustion.
CARBON
MONOXIDE
POISONING
HAZARD
Failure
to follow
this warning
could
result
in personal
iniury
or death.
Draft hood
spillage
means
there is not enough
air for proper
combustion
and carbon
monoxide
may be present.
Keep
a window
open
a minimum
of 2" (50.8
mm)
near the
appliance
until a permanent
combustion
air duct is installed,
Contact
a qualified
service
agency,
If draft hood spillage
is indicated:
1. Check
for plugged
vent
connectors
and chimneys.
Repair
stoppage
and test again.
2. If you have a fireplace,
open a window
or door near the fire-
place and then check
for spillage.
If spillage
stops,
do not
use the fireplace
until you can supply
fresh air by a perman-
ent duct.
3. If you have kitchen
and bathroom
exhaust
fans, turn them
OFF and check for spillage.
If spillage
stops, do not use ex-
haust fans until you can supply
fresh
air by a permanent
duct.
Circuit
breakers
for fans should
be turned
off and
marked
as to why they are off.
4. Spillage
means air starvation
and that an outdoor
air duct or
air intake must be installed
to provide
air directly
to the area
around
the furnace.
This duct or intake MUST
comply
with
local and state building
codes or in their absence
with the
National
Fuel Gas Code NFPA
54/ANSI
Z223.1-2006
in
the U.S., or the National
Standard
of Canada,
Natural
Gas
and
Propane
Installation
Code
CSA
B-149.1-2006
in
Canada.
Indoor
Humidity
(Your Comfort)
Relative
humidity
is
important
to
your
health.
Proper
humidification
helps cut down incidences
of respiratory
illness. Air
that is too wet may damage
the building
structure.
Air that is too
dry is uncomfortable.
A quick way to test for proper
humidity
is as
follows:
1. Look for frequent
fogging
or excessive
condensation
on the
inside of windows.
This indicates
the indoor
humidity
level
is too high for outdoor
weather
conditions.
2. Drop three ice cubes into a glass of water and stir. If, within
three minutes,
moisture
does not form on the glass, the air is
too dry and a humidifier
would
be beneficial.
(Do not per-

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