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Furnace Won't Turn On
in Portland, ME
When a Portland furnace won't start, the house gets cold fast. January temperatures here regularly fall below zero overnight, and an unheated home can drop to dangerous levels within hours. Older homes in the East End and Munjoy Hill often have 1950s-era furnaces that trip safety switches when they're overworked, and leaving the problem alone risks frozen pipes on top of the heating failure.
Quick Answer
A furnace that won't turn on usually has a tripped limit switch, a dead thermostat, or a clogged filter that shut the system down. In Portland, this happens most often in January when temperatures drop into the single digits and the furnace runs hard for days straight. Check the thermostat batteries and the filter first. If those are fine, call (207) 387-7691 before the house gets below 50 degrees.
Telltale Signs
Warning Signs to Watch For
- Thermostat is set above room temperature but nothing happens
- You hear a click but no burner flame or blower starts
- The furnace display shows an error code or flashing light
- Breaker for the furnace has tripped in the electrical panel
- Rooms stay cold even after waiting 10 minutes for the cycle to start
- Pilot light is out on older models
Root Causes
What Causes Furnace Won't Turn On?
Tripped High-Limit Switch
The high-limit switch shuts the furnace off when it overheats. In Portland homes built before 1970, ductwork is often undersized, so heat builds up inside the unit until the switch trips. Once it trips repeatedly, it may fail permanently.
The Fix
Limit Switch Replacement and Airflow Check
A technician replaces the faulty limit switch and checks airflow through the duct system. Fixing the root airflow problem keeps the switch from tripping again.
Failed Igniter or Pilot
Gas furnaces use either a hot-surface igniter or a standing pilot to light the burner. Portland's older housing stock, especially triple-deckers in the West End, often has furnaces from the 1980s with igniters that crack after years of heat cycling. A cracked igniter draws power but never gets hot enough to light the gas.
The Fix
Igniter Replacement
The old igniter is swapped out for a new one rated for the furnace model. It's a straightforward part swap that restores normal startup.
Dead Thermostat or Wiring
A thermostat with dead batteries or a broken wire sends no signal to the furnace at all. This is common after fall renovations in Portland neighborhoods like Deering Center, where wall work sometimes nicks low-voltage thermostat wiring without anyone noticing until the first cold snap.
The Fix
Thermostat Replacement or Wiring Repair
The technician traces the wiring from the thermostat to the furnace control board. A bad wire gets spliced or replaced, and a dead thermostat gets swapped out.
Self-Diagnosis
Which Cause Applies to You?
Check the signs you're observing to narrow down the likely root cause before your inspection.
| What You're Seeing | Tripped High-Limit Switch | Failed Igniter or Pilot | Dead Thermostat or Wiring |
|---|---|---|---|
| Furnace clicks but burner never lights | |||
| Furnace ran fine then suddenly stopped mid-cycle | |||
| Thermostat shows correct temperature setting but furnace does nothing | |||
| Error code on furnace display related to ignition failure | |||
| Furnace shuts off after a few minutes every time it starts |
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