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Trane 2 Flashes Error Code — Causes & Fix

⚡ Quick Answer

What Trane 2 flashes means, why it happens, and how to fix it step by step.

Trane 2 Flashes Error Code — What It Means

Two flashes on a Trane furnace LED indicates a system lockout — the furnace tried to ignite multiple times, failed, and the control board locked out to prevent unburned gas from accumulating. The board will repeat the flash sequence continuously until the fault is cleared. Lockout doesn’t mean something is permanently broken; it means the ignition sequence failed more than once (typically 3 attempts) and the board is waiting for a manual reset before trying again. The underlying cause could be anything in the ignition chain.

Jump to Fix

Common Causes

Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}

  1. Reset the lockout — Cut power at the furnace switch or breaker for 30 seconds, then restore. This clears the lockout and allows the furnace to attempt ignition again. Watch the startup sequence.
  2. Watch the igniter — Stand at the furnace during the startup attempt. You should see the igniter glow orange-hot within 30–60 seconds. If it doesn’t glow at all, test its resistance with a multimeter (power off): 40–90 ohms is good.
  3. Check the gas valve — Confirm the manual shutoff handle is parallel to the gas line (open). If gas was recently shut off, purge may be needed — the first attempt often fails because air is in the line.
  4. Clean the flame sensor — Locate the flame sensor rod (1–3 inches long, near the burner, connected by a single wire). Lightly sand the rod with fine steel wool or 400-grit sandpaper. Clean the connector pin as well.
  5. Reset the system — After any repair, power cycle and observe 2–3 full ignition cycles. If the furnace lights and stays on, you’re clear.

Parts Often Needed

PartNotes
Hot surface igniterAmazon | Match OEM part number; aftermarket igniters often have shorter lifespans
Flame sensor rodAmazon | Universal fit in most cases; costs under $15
Pressure switchAmazon | Test with manometer; replace if diaphragm is torn

When to Call a Pro

If the igniter glows, gas is flowing, and the flame sensor is clean but lockout still happens, the problem is likely in the gas valve or control board — both require a tech with proper test equipment to diagnose safely.

See Also


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