Heat Exchanger Repair Salt Lake City | CO Safety

Heat Exchanger Repair in Salt Lake County

February 19, 2025. A Sandy bench customer named Lin K. — whom you may remember from her July 2024 AC replacement story on the cooling services page — called for furnace service after her CO detector alarmed at 4:34 a.m. She’d ventilated the house and turned off the furnace as Salt Lake City Fire Department recommended. By the time Marcus Halverson arrived at 7:42 a.m., the indoor CO concentration had returned to baseline (under 5 ppm), but Lin’s children were still at her sister’s house. The diagnostic took about 35 minutes and walked through three distinct measurements that confirmed the actual problem. Lin’s 2003 Bryant 90 Plus 80% AFUE furnace had a cracked heat exchanger. Inspection Camera 4 borescope shots through three different inspection ports showed two visible vertical cracks in the secondary heat exchanger cells — classic stress-fatigue pattern from 22 winters of thermal cycling. Combustion analysis confirmed: CO air-free reading at 423 ppm during high-fire operation (versus our 100 ppm action threshold and the manufacturer’s 400 ppm failure threshold), elevated flue gas oxygen, and slight yellow tipping on the burner flames. Marcus shut off the gas supply at the equipment shutoff valve, red-tagged the furnace as unsafe per IFGC Section 503.5.4, notified Lin in writing, and provided both heat exchanger replacement and full furnace replacement quotes. On 22-year-old equipment with no other components in particularly good condition, the math favored replacement: $11,800 for a new Mitsubishi PUZ-A36NHA cold-climate heat pump system (net of rebates and credits) versus $3,400 for a heat exchanger replacement that leaves all other components running on borrowed time. Lin chose replacement. The point of this story isn’t the dollars — it’s the borescope. Without the borescope inspection, the CO problem would have looked like a venting issue or a manifold pressure issue. The borescope is the diagnostic instrument that confirms or rules out heat exchanger failure, which determines the entire repair-vs-replace decision.

Heat exchanger failures are the most safety-critical residential HVAC issue. A cracked heat exchanger allows combustion gases — including carbon monoxide — into the supply air stream being delivered to occupied spaces. Symptoms range from elevated indoor CO concentrations (subtle, often confused with flu or fatigue) to acute CO poisoning (which is potentially fatal). The Centers for Disease Control reports approximately 420 unintentional, non-fire-related CO deaths annually in the United States and approximately 50,000 emergency department visits. A meaningful percentage of these incidents trace to residential gas heating equipment with compromised heat exchangers operating undetected. This page covers what heat exchangers do, how they fail, our diagnostic procedure, the red-tag protocol when failure is confirmed, and the repair-vs-replacement economics. For broader furnace context see the furnace repair page; for replacement scenarios see the furnace installation page.

What a Heat Exchanger Does

The heat exchanger in a residential gas furnace serves one critical purpose: it separates combustion gases from the supply air delivered to your home. Combustion happens inside metal chambers (typically aluminized steel or stainless steel); the supply air blower pulls house air across the outside surface of those chambers, picking up heat through the metal walls. Combustion gases — including water vapor, CO₂, CO, nitrogen oxides, sulfur compounds — exit through the flue vent to outdoors.

If the heat exchanger metal develops any crack, pinhole, or perforation, the separation fails. Combustion gases mix with the supply air. The blower distributes that contaminated air throughout the house. Even very small cracks can produce dangerous indoor air contamination because the heat exchanger interior runs at slightly positive pressure during operation (the inducer pulls gases out, but combustion creates back-pressure).

Two heat exchanger architectures:

Single heat exchanger (80% AFUE conventional equipment):
One metal chamber per burner cell, typically clamshell-style design. Combustion gases exit at 350-450°F flue temperature, carrying significant residual heat up the chimney.
Primary + secondary heat exchanger (90-99% AFUE condensing equipment):
Primary heat exchanger handles initial combustion gas heat extraction; secondary heat exchanger (typically stainless steel) handles low-temperature condensing heat extraction. Combustion gases exit at 90-130°F flue temperature after extracting latent heat from water vapor in the exhaust. Higher AFUE because more heat is extracted; more complex because the condensing process produces mildly acidic condensate that the secondary heat exchanger and drain system must handle.

How Heat Exchangers Fail — The Five Failure Modes

1. Thermal Stress Fatigue Cracking (~50% of failures)

The dominant failure mode, especially on equipment 12+ years old. Each heating cycle subjects the heat exchanger metal to expansion from heating, then contraction during cooling. Over thousands of cycles (a typical residential furnace cycles 8,000-15,000 times per heating season), metal fatigue develops. Cracks typically start at high-stress points: corners of burner cells, edges of inspection openings, weld seams. Salt Lake County’s high heating-degree-day climate (5,650 HDD annually) means our equipment cycles more than equipment in milder climates — we typically see thermal stress cracking at equipment ages 14-18 years.

2. Corrosion from Improper Combustion (~20%)

Equipment installed without proper altitude derate for Salt Lake’s 4,226 ft elevation (per IFGC Section 304.1, 4% per 1,000 ft) runs rich — excess gas, insufficient air. The incomplete combustion produces excess CO, plus moisture and acidic byproducts that attack heat exchanger metal from inside. Equipment installed at sea-level manifold pressure (3.5″ WC) instead of altitude-derated pressure (2.4-2.9″ WC) typically fails 5-8 years sooner than properly-adjusted equipment. We see this failure mode disproportionately on equipment installed by out-of-state contractors who don’t understand the altitude requirement.

3. Overheat Damage from Chronic Airflow Restriction (~15%)

When supply airflow drops below design (dirty filter, restricted return, undersized ductwork, failing blower motor), the heat exchanger overheats because the same combustion heat is being extracted by less air. The high-limit switch trips to prevent equipment damage, but if the underlying restriction isn’t corrected, the equipment runs at elevated temperatures whenever it’s not actively tripped. Over years, the elevated temperature causes metal degradation and accelerates cracking.

4. Condensate Acid Attack (Condensing Equipment Specific, ~10%)

The secondary heat exchanger in condensing furnaces (90-99% AFUE) handles mildly acidic condensate (pH typically 3-5, comparable to lemon juice). Properly-installed condensing furnaces have neutralized drainage and stainless steel secondary heat exchangers designed for this exposure. Issues arise when: drainage is impeded (condensate sits in the heat exchanger rather than draining), neutralizer cartridges are not maintained, or non-stainless components are used. Acid attack produces pitting that eventually penetrates the heat exchanger wall.

5. Manufacturing Defects (~5%)

Occasionally heat exchangers fail due to manufacturing defects — bad weld seams, defective metal stock, improper forming. Most modern equipment has good quality control; manufacturing defects are rare but real. When suspected, we coordinate warranty replacement claims directly with the manufacturer’s technical service organization. Most heat exchanger manufacturer warranties run 10-20 years parts (limited lifetime on some premium tier equipment).

Our Diagnostic Procedure

Heat exchanger inspection is part of every furnace tune-up on equipment older than 10 years, and part of every diagnostic visit on equipment of any age presenting with CO concerns or unusual symptoms.

  1. Carbon monoxide ambient measurement. CO meter readings in equipment room and occupied spaces. Baseline must be under 9 ppm in living areas. Elevated readings indicate immediate concern.
  2. Visual inspection of accessible heat exchanger components. Equipment cabinet opened, burner box accessed (with gas off and equipment cool). Visual check for visible cracks at burner cell corners, rust accumulation, soot patterns suggesting impingement, water staining around heat exchanger (potential condensate issue).
  3. Flame characteristic observation during operation. Burner flames observed through the inspection port during normal operation. Healthy: stable blue base, minor yellow tipping, consistent across burners. Concerning: heavy yellow throughout (incomplete combustion), flame waver or pulse (air movement through heat exchanger crack causing flame disturbance), flame rollout outside burner box (cracked heat exchanger or blocked exhaust).
  4. Borescope inspection. Inspection Camera 4 with 10mm flexible scope inserted through inspection ports into the heat exchanger interior. Each cell inspected individually. Photo documentation of any visible cracks, pinholes, soot accumulation, water deposits, or perforation. This step takes 8-15 minutes per furnace depending on access.
  5. Combustion analysis at cold-start and steady-state. Testo 320 combustion analyzer measurement at burner ignition (cold cycle), again at steady-state operation (15+ minutes). Compares CO production between cold and hot cycles. Rising CO during the hot cycle indicates heat exchanger cracking — the crack opens slightly as metal heats and expands, allowing more combustion gas leakage.
  6. Manifold pressure verification. Manometer at gas valve outlet. Verifies that altitude-derated pressure is being delivered correctly. Excess manifold pressure (running rich) accelerates heat exchanger degradation.
  7. Draft pressure measurement. Verifies proper venting. Blocked or restricted venting forces combustion gases to back up and pressurize the heat exchanger interior, accelerating any existing cracks.
  8. Documentation and customer consultation. All measurements documented with photos. Findings explained to homeowner. Both repair and replacement quotes provided when failure is confirmed.

The Red-Tag Protocol

When heat exchanger failure is confirmed, we follow a specific procedure required by IFGC Section 503.5.4 and good professional practice:

  1. Equipment shutoff. Gas supply to the equipment is shut off at the equipment shutoff valve (or at the gas meter if the valve isn’t functional). Electrical power is isolated at the disconnect.
  2. Red-tagging. A physical red tag is affixed to the equipment indicating it has been determined unsafe to operate. The tag includes our company name, license number, date, and reason for shutoff.
  3. Written notification to homeowner. Customer receives a written safety notice explaining: the heat exchanger has been determined to have cracking or pinhole failure; the equipment cannot be safely operated; operating the equipment despite the shutoff creates a carbon monoxide hazard with potential for serious injury or death; the customer has options for repair or replacement, both quoted in writing.
  4. Coordination with manufacturer if under warranty. If the equipment is within manufacturer warranty period (typically 10-20 years parts on heat exchangers), we coordinate the warranty claim. Manufacturer-supplied replacement parts are at no cost; customer pays labor only.
  5. Notification to AHJ if circumstances warrant. In limited cases (e.g., known prior contractor adjusted manifold pressure incorrectly causing accelerated heat exchanger failure), we may notify the relevant building inspector. Standard heat exchanger failure due to equipment age is not an AHJ notification scenario.

We never remove a red tag at customer request. The tag stays until: heat exchanger is properly replaced and combustion analysis verifies safe operation, or equipment is removed and replaced entirely. If the customer chooses not to repair and continues to operate the equipment despite the shutoff, that’s a personal decision with significant safety implications, and our written notification documents that the customer was informed of the risk.

Repair vs. Replacement Economics

Heat exchanger replacement only:
$1,800-$3,400 typical (parts $800-$1,400 + labor 4-6 hours $1,000-$2,000). Equipment under manufacturer warranty: $1,000-$2,000 (labor only, parts covered).
Full furnace replacement (alternative path):
$4,800-$9,800 depending on tier. See the furnace installation page for tier breakdown and rebate stacking.
Decision framework by equipment age:
  • Under 8 years old AND under manufacturer warranty: Heat exchanger replacement clearly wins. Parts free under warranty; labor cost is half of new equipment cost. Equipment otherwise has remaining useful life.
  • 8-12 years old, in good condition otherwise: Borderline. Heat exchanger replacement at $1,800-$3,400 vs. full replacement at $5,800-$7,600 makes repair the apparent winner, but consider that other components are aging on the same timeline. Often points toward replacement on the principle of avoiding multiple repair visits over the next 2-3 years.
  • 12-18 years old, R-22 era for paired AC, multiple components aging: Full replacement usually wins. The “matched system” advantage (full new manufacturer warranty on AC and furnace together) plus rebate stacking plus avoiding compound future repair visits typically tips the math toward replacement.
  • 18+ years old: Full replacement clearly wins except in unusual circumstances. Operating cost on aging equipment is significantly higher than modern equipment; cumulative repair costs over the remaining 1-3 years until full failure typically exceed the savings from heat exchanger repair.
Heat pump conversion consideration:
When heat exchanger failure forces the replace-or-repair decision, it’s the right time to consider conversion to heat pump primary heating. Federal IRA 25C credit ($2,000 cap), Rocky Mountain Power Wattsmart rebate ($1,200), and Dominion Energy ThermWise transition credit ($600) can stack to $3,800 in incentives on a heat pump conversion. See the heat pumps page for full conversion economics.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I know if my heat exchanger is cracked?
You usually can’t know without professional inspection. Possible warning signs: carbon monoxide detector alarming when furnace runs, unusual flame patterns (yellow tipping, waver, rollout), persistent flu-like symptoms that improve when away from home and return when back, soot deposits around the furnace area, water staining inside the cabinet. None of these are definitive — only borescope inspection plus combustion analysis can confirm. Annual professional tune-ups with borescope inspection are the standard preventive approach. The furnace tune-up page covers our 19-point inspection in detail.
Can a cracked heat exchanger be welded or sealed?
No. Welding or sealing cracked heat exchangers is not considered a legitimate repair by manufacturer service procedures or by industry safety standards. The metal at the crack location has already failed due to thermal fatigue; surrounding metal is likely also degraded and will develop new cracks shortly. Welding repairs typically fail within 6-18 months and leave the homeowner in the same hazardous situation. The only legitimate repair options are heat exchanger component replacement (from the manufacturer) or equipment replacement.
What’s the manufacturer warranty on a heat exchanger?
Varies by manufacturer and tier. Standard residential heat exchangers: 10-15 years parts warranty typical. Premium tier equipment: 20 years parts; some lifetime limited warranty on heat exchangers (Carrier Infinity, Trane XV, Lennox SLP99V). Labor warranty is typically separate — standard 1-2 years through manufacturer, extendable to 5-10 years via extended labor warranty programs (additional cost at original purchase). Check your original installation paperwork or contact the manufacturer’s customer service to verify your equipment’s warranty status.
What if my CO detector hasn’t gone off — can I still have a cracked heat exchanger?
Yes. CO detectors are required by code to alarm at sustained CO concentrations of 70 ppm or higher. A cracked heat exchanger may produce indoor CO levels of 15-50 ppm during operation — below detector alarm threshold but well above the 9 ppm WHO recommended exposure limit. Chronic exposure to these levels causes fatigue, headaches, cognitive impairment, and over months can produce significant health effects. Borescope inspection and combustion analysis can detect heat exchanger compromise before CO levels rise to alarm threshold.
If my furnace is red-tagged, can I keep operating it just for a few more days until I get a quote?
We strongly recommend against it. Operating a confirmed-cracked heat exchanger creates risk of acute CO poisoning at any point during operation. The risk is not predictable — it depends on outdoor conditions affecting draft, combustion air supply, equipment operating cycle, and the specific crack location. If you need temporary heat while pursuing replacement, options include: portable electric space heaters for occupied rooms (with appropriate safety distance and supervision), staying with friends/family or in a hotel, or HEAT Inc. emergency replacement program through SLCAP (see the community involvement page). Continued operation of red-tagged equipment is a safety decision that should be made with full understanding of the risk.

Schedule Heat Exchanger Inspection

If you suspect heat exchanger compromise (CO detector alarming, flu-like symptoms when furnace runs, unusual flame patterns), call the 24/7 emergency line immediately. For routine annual heat exchanger inspection as part of furnace tune-up, schedule fall service.

Schedule Inspection →

Office Hours

  • Emergency Service: 24 hours a day, 7 days a week
  • Office Staff: Monday – Friday, 8:00 AM – 5:00 PM
  • Closed: Weekends and State/Federal Holidays (emergency line always active)