My Rheems furnace is 19 years prehistoric, but not malfunctioning. Should I be replacing it anyway?


You have a flawless situation. leave it alone as long as it is running properly. Start saving a bit respectively week or month towards a new one to prevent a major shock to your wallet next. The only thing your current section is doing is using more power than the newer units. i got 32 years out of my furance so it ok I don`t know have it service in the jump down


its hard to speak how long your furnace will last. call your local heat company and have a general looking after done on it, they will let you know if the heat exchanger and burners are still contained by good shape.
just because its ripened doesn't mean you have to transform it out. there are some furnaces that are 30 years old and work great. it adjectives depends on how well its taken care of. getting a topical furnace installed is about $3200.00 for high helpfulness. you also have to look at if you have an grease furnace replacing it with a natural gas or an LP furnace will salvage you money also I wouldn't replace it until there is a problem. I work for an inspection company and have see working furnaces that are as old as 25 and boilers that are much older. I would start to budget for a unusual furnace, but until something goes wrong, I wouldn't spend the money. A Rheem is a very honest brand that might last a while longer.
Answers:    That is a tough question. Always difficult to decide to replace something to be precise working okay. However, consider the efficiency and costs. Today's furnaces can come 100% efficient (all electric) or close to that if gas. That equates to smaller number cost to run them than a 19 year old furnace. If your utility rates are out of sight, it may be better to replace, any heat pump or high use. If you get energy star, you also gain a one time tax deduction--not a lot, but some bucks wager on on your investment plus savings in utilities over a time of year of time.

In a few parts of the country, utility companies give some assistance with the costs associated next to the more costly heat pumps, but they do so in instruct to reduce consumption.

Be assured, at some point your Rheem will develop a heat exchanger problem if it have not already, or a fan will go out, or something will bequeath due to the corrosiveness of gas over time. Maybe it is time to explore your options. I would start with the utility companies surrounded by your area, or the county extension agency if you have one handy. Ask for comparison charts on usefulness. Then look to some site like consumer reports (visit your library if you don't subscribe) and read up on their results of their testing miscellaneous brands and their recommendations.

I would shy away from brand recommendations on this forum or from adjectives your friends. If they are happy, theirs is the best in the world. If they enjoy had problems, it would be nice to know about them, but you would hold to canvass a lot of people to get hold of an educated guess about what NOT to buy. Even within the higher end more modernized brands, there are factions that are split between jolly and unhappy, mostly due to absence of or presence of problems. Some of those problems may not be the brand at adjectives, but the installer and responsiveness to small and large functional issues.