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Anonymous Posted on Nov 10, 2009

Goodman air conditioning not cooling thermostat settings normal

Air not cooling thermostat settings normal

  • Anonymous Nov 10, 2009

    Yes' air is blowing through the duct system but not cooling.

  • Anonymous May 11, 2010

    Do both the inside and outside units run when there is a call for cooling at the thermostat?

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1 Answer

Anonymous

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  • Master 534 Answers
  • Posted on Nov 11, 2009
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Joined: Apr 16, 2009
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Several problems could be the cause of the air not cooling. 1 the capacitor for the compressor is out. 2 the compressor itself is bad 3 the unit could be low on freon 4 the thermostat isn't wired correctly. All of these problems would need an a/c tech to look at due to the complexity of the system. Good luck hope this helped you somewhat

Dave

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Related Questions:

tip

Air Conditioners Cooling Tips

  • Whole-house fans help cool your home by pulling cool air through the house and exhausting warm air through the attic.
  • Set your thermostat as high as comfortably possible in the summer. The smaller the difference between the indoor and outdoor temperatures, the lower your overall cooling bill will be.
  • Avoid setting your thermostat at a colder setting than normal when you turn on your air conditioner. It will not cool your home any faster and could result in excessive cooling and, therefore, unnecessary expense.
  • Consider using an interior fan in conjunction with your window air conditioner to spread the cooled air more effectively through your home without greatly increasing your power use.
  • Avoid placing lamps or TV sets near your air-conditioning thermostat. The thermostat senses heat from these appliances, which can cause the air conditioner to run longer than necessary.
  • Plant trees or shrubs to shade air conditioning units but not to block the airflow. Place your room air conditioner on the north side of the house. A unit operating in the shade uses as much as 10% less electricity than the same one operating in the sun.
  • on Sep 21, 2010 • Heating & Cooling
    0helpful
    1answer

    Set thermostat at 74 heat pump will not cycle it will cycle at 75 degrees ?

    check stat calibration. see if you can measure temperture at stat. the thermostat cover temperture reading is not that accurate.
    0helpful
    1answer

    Air handler fan cuts on runs a few minutes and then cuts although thermostat is set to off.

    your thermostat could be wired in to a energy recovery venilator which will bring the unit on for a certain amount of time every hour some thermostats have recirculate mode which will do the same thing to help filter the air
    1helpful
    1answer

    Just cut on 8 year old Goodman CPLE24-1 AC for the summer. Ran 8 hours fine, Next morning noticed outside unit running, very little cool air blowing out of inside floor vents (like the blower fan was...

    Due to the many different questions I see about Air Conditioning, I am including this overview to help us better understand each other for trouble shooting. A basic air conditioning system has a Thermostat, Air Handler or Furnace Fan and a Condensing unit. In a split system, the condensing unit (Condenser) is separate from the furnace and usually in the back yard. When working properly, it blows hot air. It connects to the cooling part of the system by 2 copper lines. One large line and 1 small line. The part that cools the house is the "Evaporator" and is usually on top of the furnace inside the square metal box (Plenum). When the Air Conditioner is running, the large copper line should be cold and the smaller line should be warm. Common signs of low refrigerant are that both lines are the same temperature and/or frost or ice has built up on the large line at the condenser. The thermostat will normally display room temperature on till it is touched to change the setting. It could have a "Span" setting as well as times and temperatures. The operating "span" of MOST residential thermostats is 40 to 90 degrees. That means you can set it as low as 40 degrees and no higher than 90 degrees. It probably has a fan switch also. When in the "ON" position, the fan will run constantly, 24 / 7, but the condenser will still cycle on and off as needed to keep the house at set point. If you have a suggestion to include in this paragraph, please let me know.

    I think I have it covered above. Let me know if you need something more specific. Thank you. Roger
    0helpful
    1answer

    Goodman GPM075-3 air conditioning connections

    your thermostat powers 'Y' for cooling. That in your case blue wire connects to 'Y' on the control board in the furnace. Then a pair of low-voltage wires connects 'Y' and 'C' on the furnace to the two wires to the coil of the contactor in the a/c condensing unit. So to follow the path, the signal wire from the thermostat sends 24v down the Y wire to the furnace board Y terminal which also connects to one side of the contactor coil in the air conditioner. To complete the control circuit to the air conditioner there has to be a common wire. This is connecting the C wire from the furnace board to the other side of the contactor in the air conditioner. Hope this helps.
    4helpful
    2answers

    I just moved into a brand new home that has cental air (Goodman air conditoner) how do I turn on?

    turn the thermostat to cool and turn the temperature down if it still doesn"t run check for double pole breakers that are off
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