Mechanicals
Figure out your needs
Monthly cost of owning a home
Ideal Neighborhood
Financing Your Purchase
The FHA Mortgage
The Conventional Mortgage
The Adjustable Rate Mortgage
Department Of Veterans Affairs Mortgage
Pre-Qualified vs Pre-Approval
Phase 2: Looking
Looking at homes
Types of homes
Single Family Homes
Town Homes
Condominium
Twin Homes
Multi-Family Homes
Types of sellers
Traditional
Short Sale
Foreclosed
Researching A Home’s Public Information
Phase 3: Buying
Making an offer that counts
The Purchase Agreement
Buyer Letter to Seller
Inspections: Why get one?
Radon Testing
Sewer Line Scope Inspection
Fireplace Chimney Inspection
Phase 4: Closing
Closing Costs Explained
Title Work
Appraisals
Underwriting
Utility Bills
Preparing for the Closing
The Closing
Furnaces
There are approximately 6 common manufacturers of furnaces in the United States right now. From these 6, there are various “rebranded” models. These represent the most common models, and in Minnesota, the most well respected brands are Lennox, Trane, and Carrier. Others brands that are popular include Luxaire, York, Bryant, Payne, Goodman, Amana, and Ruud. These 10 probably represent 90% of our local market. If you look closely at this photo, it says “Apply Brand Logo Here.”
Johnson Controls
Luxaire
Coleman
York
Guardian
Lennox International
Lennox
Armstrong
Concord
Ingersoll-Rand
Trane
American Standard
United Technologies Corporation
Carrier
Bryant
Payne
Heil
Arcoaire
Comfortmaker
KeepRite
Tempstar
Clare
Daikin Group
Goodman
Amana / Whirlpool
Janitrol
Paloma Industries
Rheem
Ruud
Water Heaters
Water heaters are also mostly rebranded. There are 3 main manufacturers in the US, listed below.
Paloma Industries
Richmond
Rheem
AO Smith
AO Smith
American
Whirlpool
GSW
John Wood
Bradford White
Bradford White
Ingersol-Rand
American Standard
Electrical Panels
There are only about 7 manufacturers of electrical panels that are commonly found in the Twin Cities Metro Area. These include:
General Electric
Siemens
Square-D, including QO, and Homeline
Eaton, Cutler Hammer, Westinghouse
ITE
Sylvania / GTE
Federal Pacific
The only brand that one should exercise caution with is Federal Pacific. This brand is known to have a couple of failure modes. The first is that a breaker can pass more current than it is supposed to. A 15A breaker should trip within a certain timeframe when exceeding 15A. But this particular brand can allow much more than the 15A to pass and yet still never trip. This is an immediate fire hazard and should be replaced just on this issue alone. The second issue is that the way the breakers mount inside the box (to the buss bar), the buss bar can flex, creating an uneven connection, which can lead to over current situations within the box itself. This can also potentially lead to a fire.
The Consumer Product Safety Commission had an investigation going on the FPE breakers and boxes, but their final statement says the closed the investigation: The Consumer Product Safety Commission announced today that it is closing its two year investigation into Federal Pacific Electric Stab-lok type residential circuit breakers. This action was taken because the data currently available to the Commission does not establish that the circuit breakers pose a serious risk of injury to consumers.
Further in its press release, they state:
According to Reliance, failures of these FPE breakers to comply with certain UL calibration requirements do not create a hazard in the household environment. It is Reliance’s position that FPE breakers will trip reliably at most overload levels unless the breakers have been operated in a repetitive, abusive manner that should not occur during residential use. Reliance maintains that at those few overload levels where FPE breakers may fail to trip under realistic use conditions, currents will be too low to generate hazardous temperatures in household wiring. Reliance believes its position in this regard is supported by test data that it provided to the Commission.
The Commission staff believes that it currently has insufficient data to accept or refute Reliance’s position.
The Commission staff estimates that it would cost several million dollars to gather the data necessary to assess fully whether those circuit breakers that are installed in homes but which may fail UL calibration tests present a risk to the public.
My opinion of this is that since FPE no longer exists, there is no-one to go after to sue. Since there isn’t any money to be had, there is no reason for an investigation. Basically they are not concerned about whether or not FPE breakers and boxes actually fail, since they don’t have the data either way, and they don’t want to spend the money.
Bottom line is that if there is a Federal Pacific electrical box, I would highly recommend replacing it no matter what.
Additional Resources:
CPSC Press Release
InspectaPedia.com FPE
FurnaceCompare.com info on furnaces, boilers, water heaters, and more