Murray Winter Emergency Furnace Repair Case Study

Murray Winter Emergency Furnace Repair: Karen W. 1995 Split Level

Customer:
Karen W. (consent for documentation given)
Address area:
Murray, near 6100 South and Vine Street — established 1990s residential subdivision
Home characteristics:
1995 split-level home, approximately 2,180 sq ft on two finished levels. Lower level includes family room, third bedroom, laundry room, and mechanical room. Upper level includes living room, kitchen, primary bedroom suite, and second bedroom. Vinyl siding with brick veneer accent. Vinyl double-pane windows replaced 2012. Forced-air HVAC with original 1995 ductwork running through floor system between levels. Standard Murray split-level construction representative of the 6100 South corridor housing stock.
Project type:
Emergency furnace repair — complete no-heat event on January 8, 2025 during sub-zero overnight cold snap. Diagnosis: pressure switch failure with secondary inducer motor capacitor degradation. Component-level repair restored heating same evening.
Project completion date:
January 8, 2025 (single emergency dispatch, same-evening completion)
Total cost:
$685 (after-hours emergency dispatch + diagnostic + pressure switch + capacitor + labor)

Background

Karen W. has owned this split-level home since 2011 (14 years at time of repair). She became our customer in 2017 after experiencing repeated service issues with a previous HVAC provider whose work patterns she’d lost confidence in. Karen had been a Comfort Care plan member since 2018, with annual tune-ups consistently performed each fall and spring. Her 2008 Goodman GMS80 furnace was at 16 years service at time of failure — aging but well-maintained. The January 2025 emergency followed a cold snap that brought Murray temperatures to -8°F overnight, the kind of cold-weather stress that pushes aging components past their failure threshold.

Existing Equipment

Furnace:
2008 Goodman GMS80 furnace, 80% AFUE, 80,000 BTU/hr input. 16 years service at time of failure. Located in lower-level mechanical room. Atmospheric venting through dedicated B-vent stack. PSC single-stage blower (standard for 2008-era mid-tier residential). Single-stage gas valve.
AC matched (not involved in this repair):
2008 Goodman GSX13 AC, 2.5-ton, 13 SEER, R-410A. 16 years service. Operating normally; not relevant to this winter event.
Ductwork:
Original 1995 sheet metal trunk and branch ductwork. Trunk runs through floor system between levels. R-6 insulation on exposed mechanical room sections. Manual D static pressure during this repair visit: 0.55″ WC (within acceptable range).
Thermostat:
Honeywell T6 Pro programmable (installed 2018 during Karen’s Comfort Care enrollment, replacing original 2008 builder-grade unit). Programming reflected work-from-home schedule with conservative setbacks.
Filtration:
4-inch MERV 11 media filter (upgraded from 1-inch MERV 8 during 2022 Comfort Care plan service). Replaced annually per maintenance schedule.

Failure Event Timeline

January 7, 2025 evening:
Outdoor temperature dropping rapidly into single digits. Karen’s furnace operating normally through evening hours. Thermostat set to 68°F overnight per her usual programming.
January 8, 2025, 4:30 AM:
Karen woke to indoor temperature 56°F. Outdoor temperature -8°F. Furnace not running. Thermostat showed 68°F setpoint but no call for heat being satisfied. Karen turned thermostat up to 75°F manually; no response from furnace.
January 8, 2025, 4:45 AM:
Karen called our emergency dispatch line. Jordan (dispatch) confirmed Comfort Care plan member status and prioritized the call. Indoor temperature was 54°F and falling. Karen, age 67, lives alone — particularly important to restore heat quickly given the temperature combined with her age.
January 8, 2025, 5:00 AM:
Dakota Whitfield dispatched. On-call rotation that week. Dakota’s home in West Jordan, approximately 18 minutes from Karen’s address.
January 8, 2025, 5:23 AM:
Dakota on-site. 38 minutes from call to arrival — standard Comfort Care emergency response.

Diagnostic Process

Initial visual inspection:
  • Furnace control board lit, indicating power supply intact
  • Thermostat correctly calling for heat (24V signal verified at furnace control board)
  • Gas valve closed (consistent with safety lockout condition)
  • Status LED on control board flashing fault code 3 (Goodman GMS80 fault code: pressure switch stuck open or inducer motor not running)
Sequential diagnostic check:
  • Step 1 — Inducer motor function: Manual restart attempted. Inducer motor humming but not spinning. Removed inducer motor for bench test: capacitor measured 2.4 MFD (should be 5 MFD nominal — failed). Motor windings tested OK. Diagnosis: inducer motor start capacitor failure (common 12-18 year service life failure mode).
  • Step 2 — Pressure switch verification: With inducer motor capacitor concern noted, also verified pressure switch operation. Manometer measurement at pressure switch port: -0.18″ WC (acceptable for atmospheric venting). However, pressure switch itself measured open continuously (should close when pressure threshold reached). Diagnosis: pressure switch failed open — secondary failure that would have prevented startup even if inducer motor capacitor had been functional.
  • Step 3 — Combined failure pattern: Two-point failure typical of aging equipment under cold-weather stress. Pressure switch and inducer motor capacitor both reached failure threshold within hours of each other under the -8°F overnight stress. Cold weather stresses equipment components beyond their design margins, particularly components with degraded capacitance.
Truck inventory check:
Dakota’s truck stocked:

  • Goodman GMS80 pressure switch (truck-stocked common failure part): YES
  • 5 MFD 370V capacitor (universal truck stock): YES

Both parts available for immediate repair. No need to wait for parts delivery.

Customer communication:
Dakota explained findings to Karen at 6:10 AM:

  • Two-component failure: pressure switch + inducer motor capacitor
  • Both components truck-stocked, available for immediate repair
  • Estimated repair time: 45-60 minutes
  • Estimated cost: $685 total ($185 after-hours dispatch + $145 pressure switch + $35 capacitor + $245 labor + $75 diagnostic premium for cold-weather emergency)
  • Comfort Care plan 15% discount applied (final invoice $685, reduced from $805 list pricing)

Karen authorized repair.

Repair Execution

6:15 AM:
Began component replacement. Inducer motor capacitor replacement (12-minute work). Capacitor disconnected, replaced with new 5 MFD 370V unit. Wire connections verified.
6:30 AM:
Pressure switch replacement (18-minute work). Existing pressure switch removed (single screw mount, two wire connections). New pressure switch installed in same position. Pressure-sensing tube reconnected.
6:50 AM:
System restart attempted. Thermostat call for heat initiated full startup sequence:

  • Inducer motor started normally (capacitor functional)
  • Pressure switch closed within manufacturer-specified 30 seconds (new switch functional)
  • HSI igniter heated
  • Gas valve opened
  • Burner ignition successful
  • Flame sensor confirmed flame
  • Main blower started after 90-second prepurge delay

Full normal startup sequence executed without faults. Furnace operating normally.

7:05 AM:
Combustion analysis verification (Testo 320):

  • CO at flue: 18 ppm (excellent — well within acceptable range)
  • O₂ in flue gas: 7.8%
  • Steady-state efficiency: 81.4% (typical for 16-year-old 80% AFUE equipment)
  • Manifold pressure: 3.4″ WC (altitude-adjusted from nameplate 3.5″ WC)

All readings within acceptable range. Equipment safe to operate, no other issues identified.

7:15 AM:
Heat exchanger borescope inspection (precautionary given equipment age):

  • Primary heat exchanger visual: surface oxidation present (typical for 16-year-old equipment) but no cracks identified
  • Secondary heat exchanger area: typical wear, no concerns
  • Estimated remaining heat exchanger service life: 3-6 years

No emergency heat exchanger concern identified.

7:25 AM:
Customer briefing with Karen. Discussed:

  • What failed and why (cold-weather stress on aging components)
  • What was repaired
  • Equipment age (16 years) and replacement planning timeline
  • Recommended proactive replacement consideration for 2025-2027 timeframe
  • Documentation of repair for Comfort Care plan service history
7:40 AM:
Dakota departed. Karen’s home reached 68°F by approximately 9:30 AM (sustained recovery from 54°F starting temperature with -8°F outdoor temperature).

Cost Breakdown

Itemized invoice:
  • After-hours emergency dispatch fee: $185
  • Diagnostic premium for cold-weather emergency: $75
  • Pressure switch (Goodman OEM replacement): $145
  • 5 MFD 370V capacitor: $35
  • Labor (Dakota Whitfield, approximately 2.5 hours on-site including diagnostic, repair, verification): $385
  • Combustion analysis and verification: $0 (included as standard with repair)
  • Heat exchanger borescope (precautionary): $0 (included as standard with repair)
  • Subtotal: $825
  • Comfort Care plan 15% discount: -$124
  • Long-term customer adjustment (Karen customer since 2017): -$16
  • Total customer cost: $685
Note on after-hours pricing:
The after-hours emergency dispatch fee ($185) and cold-weather emergency premium ($75) reflect: (a) technician availability outside business hours, (b) priority dispatch given cold-weather context, (c) Comfort Care plan member benefits (without the plan, after-hours dispatch would have been $245 + cold-weather premium $145 = $390 in dispatch fees alone).
Comparison to alternative approaches:
  • Wait-until-morning approach: Karen could have used portable space heaters overnight and called during business hours. Pros: lower dispatch fee. Cons: indoor temperature in 50s, age 67 in home alone, no guarantee of fast morning dispatch given high call volume during cold snaps.
  • DIY repair attempt: capacitor replacement is technically feasible for a homeowner. Pros: lowest cost. Cons: pressure switch diagnostic and replacement requires technical knowledge, gas valve safety lockout sequence requires understanding of Goodman fault codes, combustion verification after repair requires Testo 320 or equivalent (not common homeowner equipment).
  • Full furnace replacement during emergency: same-day emergency replacement during cold snap typically $11,000-$14,000+ depending on equipment availability and tier selection. Significantly more disruptive than component repair when component repair is viable.

Post-Repair Outcomes

Immediate (post-repair January 8, 2025):
Karen’s home reached 68°F by 9:30 AM and maintained setpoint through balance of cold snap (4 additional days of below-freezing temperatures). System operated normally with no further issues.
Winter 2024-2025 remainder of season:
  • No additional service calls between January 8 and end of heating season (April 2025)
  • Furnace operating normally across remaining cold weather events
  • Karen’s confidence in continued operation supported by Comfort Care plan and 2025 spring inspection
Spring 2025 follow-up:
Karen requested spring tune-up to verify continued operation health. Marcus Halverson performed inspection March 28, 2025. Findings:

  • Recent component replacements (pressure switch, capacitor) functioning normally
  • No additional component degradation identified
  • Heat exchanger borescope unchanged from January assessment — no new concerns
  • Marcus discussed proactive replacement planning timeline with Karen for 2025-2027 timeframe
Karen’s overall assessment:
“Dakota arrived faster than I expected at 5:30 in the morning on the coldest night of the year. He explained what was happening clearly. The repair was done by 7:45 and my house was warm again by mid-morning. The Comfort Care plan paid for itself with this single call — I would have paid significantly more without it.”
Ongoing service relationship:
Karen continued Comfort Care plan into 2025-2026. Annual fall and spring tune-ups scheduled. Plan provides priority dispatch for any future emergencies. Service relationship continues smoothly. Proactive replacement planning in progress for 2025-2027 timeframe; Karen would prefer to replace during summer for off-peak pricing rather than wait for next emergency.

Why This Case Study Illustrates Important Patterns

Cold-weather emergency response priority:
Cold-weather furnace failures pose elevated risk to vulnerable occupants. Karen’s situation (age 67, living alone, -8°F overnight) elevated the dispatch priority. 38-minute response time from call to on-site reflects Comfort Care plan priority dispatch protocol. Without plan, dispatch wait times during cold snap peak demand can be 4-8 hours.
Cascading component failure pattern:
Multi-component failures often emerge under stress conditions. Cold-weather stress on aging equipment pushes components past failure threshold simultaneously. Pressure switch failure AND inducer motor capacitor degradation occurring within hours of each other is typical pattern for 15+ year-old equipment in cold-weather conditions. Single-component diagnostics can miss the second failure if technician doesn’t proactively check related components.
Truck inventory significance:
Carrying common-failure parts (pressure switches, capacitors, contactors, igniters) on service trucks allows same-visit repair instead of return-trip scheduling. For emergency calls during cold snaps, parts availability difference can mean 4-8 hours of additional cold exposure. Truck inventory decisions reflect operational philosophy: invest in inventory to deliver faster service rather than minimize inventory for cost optimization.
Comprehensive diagnostic vs. quick-fix:
Single-symptom diagnosis (“inducer motor not running”) could have led to capacitor-only replacement that would have left pressure switch failure undetected. Furnace would have failed again on next thermostat call. Comprehensive diagnostic (checking pressure switch independently of inducer motor) identified both failures and prevented next-day return visit.
Combustion analysis after repair:
Testo 320 combustion analysis after any repair on gas equipment provides safety verification. CO levels at flue and ambient, O₂ percentage, steady-state efficiency confirm safe operation. Skipping this verification during emergency repairs can leave undetected issues. Combustion analysis is part of every emergency repair regardless of time pressure.
Proactive replacement planning timeline:
Karen’s 16-year-old furnace is at approximately 80% of expected service life (typical 18-22 year service life for 80% AFUE residential equipment). Proactive replacement planning for 2025-2027 timeframe allows: (a) off-peak summer scheduling, (b) competitive bid evaluation, (c) budget planning, (d) avoidance of next emergency repair cost. Aging equipment that’s accumulating component failures is sending replacement signals; recognizing them allows planning.

Code and Standards Compliance Documentation

Applicable codes and standards:
  • 2024 IMC with Utah amendments: Mechanical equipment service
  • UMC Section 510: Combustion air provision (atmospheric venting verified)
  • IFGC Section 304.1: Altitude derate at Murray 4,355 ft elevation (manifold pressure verified)
  • NEC Article 725: Class 2 control circuits (24V thermostat wiring)
  • NEC 250.104(B): CSST bonding verified compliant
  • Utah DOPL HVAC contractor licensing: #11567823-5501 active and current
Permit:
Not required for component-level emergency repair (pressure switch and capacitor replacement). Equipment replacement would require permit; component repair does not.
Documentation maintained:
Service report with failure analysis, components replaced, combustion analysis verification, heat exchanger borescope findings, customer communication record, Comfort Care plan service history update.

Frequently Asked Questions

What should I do if my furnace fails in cold weather?
(1) Verify thermostat is set correctly and calling for heat. (2) Check that gas supply isn’t shut off at the meter or equipment valve. (3) Check breaker for furnace circuit. (4) If those basics are confirmed, call for service. For cold-weather emergencies (overnight, sub-freezing), Comfort Care plan members receive priority dispatch with target 30-60 minute response. Without plan, dispatch wait times during peak demand cold snaps can extend significantly. Use portable space heaters as bridge if dispatch wait will be extended; keep them away from flammable materials and not running unattended.
Why did two components fail at the same time?
Cold-weather stress on aging equipment is the common pattern. Pressure switches and capacitors both age across operating cycles; sub-zero overnight temperatures push aging components past their margin simultaneously. Equipment in the 12-18 year range often shows this multi-component failure pattern during cold snaps. Younger equipment usually fails one component at a time; older equipment cascades.
Could I have done this repair myself?
Capacitor replacement is technically feasible for an experienced homeowner. Pressure switch replacement is more complex (requires understanding of gas safety sequence). The bigger concern is combustion analysis after repair — verifying CO levels, manifold pressure, and proper startup sequence. Without that verification, you could have a “running” furnace that’s producing dangerous combustion conditions. Component replacement without verification creates safety risk that exceeds the cost savings.
How much longer will Karen’s furnace last after this repair?
Difficult to predict precisely. 16 years on 80% AFUE residential equipment is approximately 75-85% of expected service life. Two components replaced in this repair (pressure switch, capacitor) are now new. Other components (inducer motor itself, blower motor, gas valve, control board) are at original equipment age. Likely remaining service life: 3-6 years before another major component failure or heat exchanger end-of-life. Proactive replacement during 2025-2027 timeframe avoids next emergency.
What’s the difference between the Comfort Care plan and just calling when needed?
Comfort Care plan benefits: priority dispatch (38-minute response in this case), 15% discount on repair parts and labor, annual tune-ups (fall + spring) catch developing issues, service history documentation supports equipment warranty claims. Without plan: same repair would have cost approximately $805 list pricing instead of $685 (15% higher), dispatch priority would have been lower during cold snap peak demand. Plan cost ($240/year for residential single-family) typically pays for itself with first emergency call.

Project Details Summary

Customer:
Karen W. (Comfort Care plan member since 2018, customer since 2017)
Property:
Murray 1995 split-level home, 2,180 sq ft on two finished levels
Failure event:
January 8, 2025 4:30 AM, -8°F overnight cold snap, 2008 Goodman GMS80 furnace pressure switch + inducer motor capacitor cascading failure
Diagnostic:
Goodman fault code 3 (pressure switch / inducer motor), bench tested capacitor 2.4 MFD vs 5 MFD spec (capacitor failure), pressure switch open continuously (failed open), comprehensive two-component failure identification
Repair:
Both components truck-stocked, same-visit replacement (pressure switch + 5 MFD capacitor), combustion analysis verification (CO 18 ppm at flue), heat exchanger borescope inspection (no concerns identified)
Response time:
38 minutes from call (4:45 AM) to on-site (5:23 AM); diagnosis to repair completion 2 hours 15 minutes; heat restoration to 68°F by 9:30 AM
Total cost:
$685 (Comfort Care plan member pricing; list pricing $805)
Outcome:
Same-evening heat restoration. No additional service calls remainder of winter season. Spring 2025 follow-up verified continued operation. Proactive replacement planning in progress for 2025-2027.

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