A vent that is buried in snow is starving your furnace for the air it needs for combustion.
Furnace exhaust pipe covered in snow.
The solution is simple.
The furnace vent pipes the exhaust and intake can get plugged up with snow he said.
If enough snow falls in your area during a short period of time the pipes may become clogged with the snow which may freeze in the vent pipe.
Your plumbing vent pipes sit exposed on your house s roof where objects such as tree twigs tennis balls and even snow may fall down the pipes.
If your furnace is continuously trying to start up but isn t turning on the problem may be a blocked outdoor intake and exhaust pipe.
And that now has safety experts sending out a reminder to homeowners to make sure their furnace.
Anything that can block hvac vents or the intake exhaust pipe to your furnace or water can cause significant damage to those systems.
Just as with a furnace vent pipe gas and electric meters can malfunction if exposed to frost ice or a buildup of snow.
Don t forget the meters.
When we have a lot of blizzarding snow the pipes.
When it snows most people focus on driving conditions and shoveling sidewalks.
Don t block your intake or exhaust pipe for your furnace or water heater.
If your furnace vent isn t through a chimney on your roof you ll need to look for a lateral vent for both the air intake and the exhaust.
Severe snowfall or snow that collects in areas around your home should also be on everyone s mind as winter approaches.
Clear the snow from the intake and exhaust pipe.
Mother nature can be aggressive sometimes as today.
The unit will reset.
Turn the furnace off wait a minute and then turn back on.
The snow that fell is being blown around by steady winds causing a lot of drifting in the area.