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A Guide to Cad Cell Relay Switches on Oil Burners
HeatAPedia ©
- Cad Cell Relay Controls: a guide to inspecting and re-setting the cad cell relay safety device on oil burners
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- What are the basic components of heating systems?
- Troubleshooting heating system controls
- How to inspect & repair central heating systems
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Here we discuss Cad Cell Relay Controls: a guide to inspecting and re-setting the cad cell relay safety device on oil burners. Readers
will also find that
this website answers most questions about central heating system troubleshooting, inspection, diagnosis, and repairs. We describe how to inspect
residential heating systems to inform home owners, buyers, and home inspectors of common heating system defects. The articles at this website describe the basic components of a home heating system,
how to find the rated heating capacity of an heating system by examining various data tags and components, how to recognize common heating system operating or safety defects, and how to save money on home heating costs.
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© Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use the links at page left to navigate this document or to go to Other Website Topics. Green links at left show where you are in our document & website.
A Guide to Oil Fired Furnace or Heating Boiler Cad Cell Relays found on Oil Burners
Flame sensing devices on oil-fired heating appliances: modern oil-fired heating furnaces, boilers, and water heaters use a Cadmium Cell
sensor, usually located inside the oil burner tube, to "see" the
presence of flame and thus to assure that the oil burner assembly stops pumping oil into the combustion chamber if flame ignition is
unsuccessful. The cad cell itself, that is the little cell that "sees" the oil burner flame,
is wired (often by a yellow wire) to the cad cell relay switch (see photo) which is ususally a gray box with a red "reset" button located on top of or alongside
the the oil burner assembly. The cad cell causes the relay to switche the oil burner off when a flame is not established or if flame is lost at the
oil burner (or inside the furnace or boiler's combustion chamber).
Our photograph shows a modern Honeywell(R) R8184G 4009 cad cell
relay for use on (typical) intermittent ignition oil burner equipment. This device is likely to be found on oil burners less tan 15 years old,
and on both hot air furnaces and hot water boiler heating systems provided that they are heated by an oil burner.
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How to Reset the Cad Cell Relay on an Oil Burner for Boilers & Furnaces
How to Reset the Oil Burner Cad Cell Relay:
The photograph tells alot about this oil burner and heating system. The debris on top of the cad cell relay contacts (pointed to by our
ruler) indicates that the system is running dirty and perhaps with a puff-back at startup or with backpressure in the combustion chamber.
Look closely at the mostly-covered gray cover of this Honeywell cad cell relay control. In the upper center of the photo you can just see
a hole in the top of the cover. This is where we should have seen a red cad cell relay button. But the button itself, a plastic
part affixed to the cover top, has broken away. We can still reset this cad cell relay however, by removing the cover and looking inside
for the button which is mounted on the relay circuit board itself. That button is the actual relay switch and it can still be pressed
to reset the switch if needed, even if the external button has been lost.
If the red "reset" button on the cad cell relay is sticking up and the oil burner has shut down,
the homeowner is permitted to try ONCE to "reset" the system by pressing the red reset button.
If the oil burner does not turn on and run normally and continuously (no smoke,
no loud noises, etc.) for at least 5 or 10 minutes after resetting the relay or pressing the reset button, DO NOT keep resetting the system since
doing so can flood the combustion chamber with un-burned heating oil - a dangerous condition.
The photograph shows an older Honeywell cad cell relay swtich - the gray box in the right in this illustration. If the cad cell has
told the relay that it can't see any flame, the cad cell relay switch will have turned off electrical power to the oil burner
and the red button will have popped up.
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How to Test the Oil Burner Cadmium Cell Relay Switch
Testing cad cell relays: is possible by simply pressing the red button down when the oil burner is operating. If the
oil burner is operating normally and you press the cad cell relay reset button donwn it should turn off the oil burner.
When you release the button the oil burner should re-start. This test checks the interrupt circuit in the relay. We recommend
not trying this test unless the oil burner has been on for a few minutes or more (and has had time to warm up) so that we
don't produce unnecessary sooting in the combustion chamber during stop and start of the burner.
How to Service or Replace the Cad Cell Relay on an Oil Burner
Cleaning or replacing an oil burner cad cell is pretty easy, but this is a job for the service technician since
it's necessary to turn off power to the oil burner and partly disassemble the oil burner to access the cad cell sensor.
Often by removing a lock screw or two, the voltage transformer (the black box atop[ the oil burner in this photo) is
simply hinged back and one can see the yellow wire entering the oil burner tube and leading to the cad cell sensor. The
cad cell relay sensor will be mounted in a little bracket and positioned where it can "see" the flame when the
oil burner is operating.
If the oil burner has not been operating properly, say has been producing too much smoke and soot, even after it has
been adjusted it may be necessary to inspect and clean soot from the cad cell sensor so that it has a non-sooty clear
view of the flame. Or the technician, if s/he has any doubt about the sensor, will simply replace it. It's a simple plug-in
part (two pins on the sensor plug into a receptacle that is secured by a bracket inside of the oil burner tube).
Technical Reviewers
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More Information on Inspecting and Repairing Heating Systems
- Carbon Dioxide Gas Toxicity
- Carbon Monoxide Gas Toxicity, exposure limits, poisoning symptoms, and inspecting buildings for CO hazards
- Dust from HVAC? An Investigation of Indoor Dust Debris Blamed on a Heating/Cooling System Reveals Carpet Dust
- Goodman Furnace High Temperature Plastic Vent HTPV safety recall US CPSC notice
- Home Heating System Should Be Checked [for proper venting and for CO Carbon Monoxide Hazards - DJF]
- Inspection Procedures for Oil-Fired Heating Systems Detailed step by step approaches for inspecting complex systems]
- Lennox Pulse Furnace Safety Inspection/Warranty Program: Carbon Monoxide Warning
- Oil Tanks - The Oil Storage Tank Information Website: Buried or Above Ground Oil Tank Inspection, Testing, Cleanup, Abandonment of Oil Tanks
- Oil Tanks Above Ground, UL Standards, guidance for home owners, buyers, and inspectors
- Plastic Heating Vent Pipe & Other Heating Safety Recall Notices
- Weil McLain Model GV Gas Boiler/gas valve CPSC recall/repair
- Domestic and Commercial Oil Burners, Charles H. Burkhardt, McGraw Hill Book Company, New York 3rd Ed 1969.
- National Fuel Gas Code (Z223.1) $16.00 and National Fuel Gas Code Handbook (Z223.2) $47.00 American Gas Association (A.G.A.), 1515 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22209 also available from National Fire Protection Association, Batterymarch Park, Quincy, MA 02269. Fundamentals of Gas Appliance Venting and Ventilation, 1985, American Gas Association Laboratories, Engineering Services Department. American Gas Association, 1515 Wilson Boulevard, Arlington, VA 22209. Catalog #XHO585. Reprinted 1989.
- The Steam Book, 1984, Training and Education Department, Fluid Handling Division, ITT [probably out of print, possibly available from several home inspection supply companies] Fuel Oil and Oil Heat Magazine, October 1990, offers an update,
- Principles of Steam Heating, $13.25 includes postage. Fuel oil & Oil Heat Magazine, 389 Passaic Ave., Fairfield, NJ 07004.
- The Lost Art of Steam Heating, Dan Holohan, 516-579-3046 FAX
- Principles of Steam Heating, Dan Holohan, technical editor of Fuel Oil and Oil Heat magazine, 389 Passaic Ave., Fairfield, NJ 07004 ($12.+1.25 postage/handling).
- "Residential Steam Heating Systems", Instructional Technologies Institute, Inc., 145 "D" Grassy Plain St., Bethel, CT 06801 800/227-1663 [home inspection training material] 1987
- "Residential Hydronic (circulating hot water) Heating Systems", Instructional Technologies Institute, Inc., 145 "D" Grassy Plain St., Bethel, CT 06801 800/227-1663 [home inspection training material] 1987
- "Warm Air Heating Systems". Instructional Technologies Institute, Inc., 145 "D" Grassy Plain St., Bethel, CT 06801 800/227-1663 [home inspection training material] 1987
- Heating, Ventilating, and Air Conditioning Volume I, Heating Fundamentals,
- Boilers, Boiler Conversions, James E. Brumbaugh, ISBN 0-672-23389-4 (v. 1) Volume II, Oil, Gas, and Coal Burners, Controls, Ducts, Piping, Valves, James E. Brumbaugh, ISBN 0-672-23390-7 (v. 2) Volume III, Radiant Heating, Water Heaters, Ventilation, Air Conditioning, Heat Pumps, Air Cleaners, James E. Brumbaugh, ISBN 0-672-23383-5 (v. 3) or ISBN 0-672-23380-0 (set) Special Sales Director, Macmillan Publishing Co., 866 Third Ave., New York, NY 10022. Macmillan Publishing Co., NY
- Installation Guide for Residential Hydronic Heating Systems
- Installation Guide #200, The Hydronics Institute, 35 Russo Place, Berkeley Heights, NJ 07922
- The ABC's of Retention Head Oil Burners, National Association of Oil Heat Service Managers, TM 115, National Old Timers' Association of the Energy Industry, PO Box 168, Mineola, NY 11501. (Excellent tips on spotting problems on oil-fired heating equipment. Booklet.)
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