Trane 9 Flashes Error Code — What It Means
Nine flashes on a Trane furnace status LED indicates a low or no flame signal — the ignitor lit the burner, but the flame sensor returned a microamp reading too low for the board to confirm stable combustion. The board will allow 3–4 ignition trials before locking out. This fault most often points to a contaminated flame sensor, but a weak gas supply or marginal ignitor can also cause it. The furnace will attempt to restart after the lockout timer, then lock out again if the issue isn’t resolved.
Common Causes
- Dirty or oxidized flame sensor — Carbon or oxide buildup on the rod reduces conductivity; this is the most common cause and the easiest fix.
- Weak or cracked ignitor — A hot surface ignitor that hasn’t fully failed may light the burner inconsistently, leading to a marginal flame signal.
- Low gas pressure — Under-pressure at the manifold produces a weak, unstable flame that the sensor can’t read reliably.
- Flame sensor grounding issue — Loose mounting or a cracked ceramic insulator can cause the sensor signal to bleed to ground.
Step-by-Step Fix {#fix}
- Locate the flame sensor — It’s a single metal rod with a ceramic insulator, positioned in the burner flame path, with one wire leading to the control board.
- Clean the flame sensor rod — Remove the sensor (one screw). Lightly buff the metal rod with fine steel wool or emery cloth until it’s shiny. Do not use sandpaper — it leaves abrasive residue.
- Check the sensor wire and connector — Inspect the wire for cracking or pinching; check the connector at the board for corrosion or looseness.
- Verify gas pressure — Check manifold pressure with a manometer. Typical natural gas manifold pressure is 3.5” W.C.; LP is 10” W.C. Low pressure points to a regulator or gas valve issue.
- Test ignitor resistance — With power off, measure resistance across the ignitor terminals. Silicon nitride ignitors typically read 40–80 Ω when cold. Open circuit = replace ignitor.
- Reset the system — Power off for 30 seconds. Restore power and call for heat. Watch the ignitor glow bright orange and confirm flame holds after ignition.
Parts Often Needed
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Flame sensor rod | Amazon | Inexpensive universal or OEM; match length and mounting bracket style |
| Hot surface ignitor | Amazon | Silicon nitride (most Trane) — match voltage (120V) and resistance spec |
| Gas valve | Amazon | Only if manifold pressure is confirmed low and regulator adjustment doesn’t correct it |
When to Call a Pro
If cleaning the flame sensor and verifying gas pressure don’t resolve the fault, and the furnace consistently fails to hold flame, suspect a cracked heat exchanger pulling excess combustion air across the burner. This is a safety issue requiring professional inspection — do not continue operating the furnace.