Carbon monoxide (CO) poisoning kills hundreds of Americans every year, and a malfunctioning furnace is one of the most common sources in cold-weather states. Minnesota's long heating season—seven months of heavy furnace use—makes CO awareness critical for every homeowner.
How Furnaces Produce Carbon Monoxide
Gas furnaces burn natural gas to generate heat. Complete combustion produces carbon dioxide and water vapor—harmless at normal concentrations. Incomplete combustion produces carbon monoxide—a colorless, odorless gas that binds to hemoglobin and prevents oxygen delivery to organs.
The critical safety barrier is the heat exchanger: a metal chamber that separates combustion gases from the air circulated through your home. When a heat exchanger cracks, combustion byproducts—including CO—can leak into your living space.
What Causes CO Problems in Furnaces
- Cracked heat exchanger — The most serious cause. Metal fatigue from years of heating cycles creates cracks in older furnaces (15+ years).
- Blocked flue or exhaust — Bird nests, ice buildup on PVC exhaust pipes (common in MN winters), or disconnected flue sections trap combustion gases.
- Dirty or misaligned burners — Improper combustion shifts the CO/CO₂ ratio in exhaust gases.
- Backdrafting — Negative pressure from exhaust fans or poor sealing pulls combustion gases backward through the flue.
Warning Signs of CO Exposure
CO poisoning symptoms mimic flu without fever: headache (especially upon waking), dizziness, nausea, fatigue, or confusion. The key indicator: symptoms improve when you leave home and return when you come back. If multiple family members experience these symptoms simultaneously, treat it as a CO emergency.
Minnesota CO Detector Requirements
Minnesota law requires CO detectors in all single-family homes. Required within 10 feet of every sleeping room, on every level with a sleeping area, and in homes with attached garages. Detectors must be UL-listed. For maximum protection, also place one near your furnace and fuel-burning water heater.
CO Detector Guide
| Type | Cost | Lifespan | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Battery plug-in | $20–$40 | 5–7 years | Replace batteries annually |
| Combo smoke + CO | $30–$70 | 5–7 years | Verify both sensors are UL-listed |
| Smart/connected (Nest, etc.) | $100–$180 | 5–7 years | Phone alerts—great for vacation homes |
What to Ask Your HVAC Technician
At every annual tune-up, ask the technician to visually inspect the heat exchanger for cracks, perform a combustion analysis measuring CO in flue gases, check the flue for proper draft, and inspect the gas valve and burner alignment. See our complete maintenance checklist for what professional inspections should cover.
Cracked Heat Exchanger: The Only Safe Answer Is Replacement
If your technician finds a cracked heat exchanger, the furnace must be shut down. A cracked heat exchanger cannot be safely repaired—it must be replaced. On most furnaces, replacement cost approaches or exceeds the cost of a new furnace, making this almost always a full replacement scenario.
When you need a new furnace fast, Furnace Direct delivers Goodman units same-day or next-day to the Minnesota metro—so you're not without heat in the cold.
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