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Payne PG8MAA042090 gas furnace

Payne PG8MAA042090 gas furnace Parts

Here are the diagrams and repair parts for Payne PG8MAA042090 gas furnace, as well as links to manuals and error code tables, if available.

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Browse Parts for PG8MAA042090 Gas Furnace

  • Control Box for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326712-701

    Cabinet assy diagram

    Control Box

    Part #326712-701

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Box for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326700-401

    Control box assy diagram

    Box

    Part #326700-401

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Brner Supt Assembly  ( Includes Keys 80 - 82 ) for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326718-703

    Inducer assy diagram

    Brner Supt Assembly ( Includes Keys 80 - 82 )

    Part #326718-703

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Gas Control for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326611-703

    Cabinet assy diagram

    Gas Control

    Part #326611-703

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Cover Assembly for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326614-701

    Cabinet assy diagram

    Cover Assembly

    Part #326614-701

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Blo Shelf Assembly for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326617-706

    Casing assy diagram

    Blo Shelf Assembly

    Part #326617-706

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Plate Bottom for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326607-402

    Cabinet assy diagram

    Plate Bottom

    Part #326607-402

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Manifold for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326648-403

    Inducer assy diagram

    Manifold

    Part #326648-403

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Furnace Blower for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part 326720-725

    Cabinet assy diagram

    Furnace Blower

    Part #326720-725

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

  • Retainer for Payne PG8MAA042090 - Part AS31XH282

    Outer door/vent assy diagram

    Retainer

    Part #AS31XH282

    The manufacturer no longer makes this part, and there's no substitute part

Payne Gas Furnace PG8MAA042090 FAQs

You typically cannot determine the exact age of a Payne gas furnace from the model number alone. For model PG8MAA042090, the model number mainly describes the series and size; the manufacture date is normally encoded in the serial number on the rating plate. Use the PG8MAA042090 installation guide to confirm where to find identification labels and service information.

Where to find the information you need

Look for the furnace rating plate and record both the model and serial number.

  • Check inside the blower compartment or on the inside of an access door
  • Look near the burner compartment or vestibule panel
  • Write down the full serial number exactly as shown
  • Take a clear photo before you call for parts or service
  • Keep the serial number with your maintenance records

What the model number tells you (and what it does not)

The installation literature shows an example of how Payne model numbers are structured (series, variations, and size). That structure helps identify the correct parts and configuration, but it is not a reliable date code.

Identifier Usually indicates Best use
Model number (PG8MAA042090) Series and capacity family Matching parts and documentation
Serial number Manufacturing date code Determining furnace age

Quick age-check tips that work for most furnaces

Use these steps once you have the serial number:

  • Compare the serial format to the manufacturer’s serial decoding chart
  • If you have a service label with a date, use that as a reference point
  • Check the installation sticker (sometimes the installer writes the install date)
  • If the control has stored fault history, clear it only after recording codes (helps service techs)

Why it matters

Knowing the furnace age helps us match the right Payne parts (like a control board, igniter, or limit switch), plan maintenance, and decide whether a repair is cost-effective.

Last updated: February 2026

Yes. Payne still makes and sells gas furnaces, and your Payne PG8MAA042090 is part of that product family. For model-specific details like approved installation locations, gas type, and operating limits, we follow the PG8MAA042090 installation guide.

What this means for your PG8MAA042090

Payne continues to support residential gas furnace designs like this Category I, fan-assisted style. The installation instructions for this furnace family also confirm it is designed for natural gas from the factory, with an approved conversion kit required if converting to propane.

Key model-family facts called out in the guide

  • Factory-shipped for natural gas (check the furnace rating plate for your exact setup)
  • Convertible to propane only with a listed accessory conversion kit
  • Approved for common residential locations (alcoves, attics, basements, closets, utility rooms, crawlspaces, garages)
  • Not approved for mobile homes, recreational vehicles, or outdoor installation
  • Return-air temperature limits: 60°F to 80°F continuous (intermittent operation down to 55°F)

Quick reference table

Topic What to expect Where to confirm
Gas type Natural gas (factory) Rating plate and PG8MAA042090 installation guide
Propane use Requires listed conversion kit PG8MAA042090 installation guide
Install locations Many indoor residential locations PG8MAA042090 installation guide
Return-air temp 60°F to 80°F continuous PG8MAA042090 installation guide

Why it matters

Knowing Payne still manufactures furnaces helps when you are planning service, upgrades, or parts replacement. For safe operation and reliable heating, the most important step is matching the furnace configuration (fuel type, venting, and clearances) to what the installation requirements specify.

Last updated: February 2026

On a Payne PG8MAA042090 gas furnace, the model number is printed on the furnace rating plate (data sticker) inside the cabinet, typically on or near the blower compartment or the inside of an access door. Use the model number exactly as shown when ordering parts.

Where to look on the furnace cabinet

Check these common locations first (power off at the furnace switch or breaker before opening panels):

  • Inside the blower access door area (often near the sight glass used to view the control LED)
  • On the inside surface of the outer access door
  • On the blower compartment wall near the control board and wiring
  • Near the burner section divider panel (depending on orientation)

For diagrams and access-panel details, use the PG8MAA042090 installation guide.

What the model number looks like (and why it matters)

Payne model numbers are a string of letters and numbers that identify series, fuel type, and size. Your rating plate will show the full model and serial number.

What you need Example Used for
Model number PG8MAA042090 Correct part fit and service info
Serial number (varies) Production date and service history

Why it matters

  • Ensures the correct control board, igniter, limit switch, or blower parts match your exact furnace
  • Helps a technician interpret status code LED troubleshooting information
  • Prevents ordering a look-alike part that mounts differently or has different wiring

Tips for reading and recording the sticker

  • Write the model number down exactly; include every letter and digit.
  • Take a clear photo before the label gets dusty or faded.
  • If you are troubleshooting, note any LED flash pattern before cycling power.

If you are diagnosing an electrical issue, our how to use a multimeter to test electrical parts video helps you test safely and accurately.

Last updated: February 2026

For a Payne gas furnace like model PG8MAA042090, the model number identifies the product series and configuration, while the data plate (rating plate) and serial number provide the most reliable details for capacity, electrical requirements, and manufacturing date. Use the PG8MAA042090 installation guide alongside the furnace label to match size and specs.

Where to find the model and serial information

You will typically find the rating plate:

  • Inside the blower compartment or behind an access panel
  • On the furnace cabinet side wall
  • Near the burner compartment area (varies by installation)
  • On a label that also lists gas type, input/output, and electrical data

What the model number tells you (and what it does not)

Model numbers usually encode the series and design family. For this Payne model, the clearest model-specific decoding you can do from the documentation is to match the size group used in the electrical and dimensional tables.

Common items you can confirm from the label

  • Brand and model (Payne PG8MAA042090)
  • Fuel type (natural gas is typical; confirm on the rating plate)
  • Electrical (volts, hertz, phase, and required circuit details)
  • Furnace size grouping used for tables (example: “090” size)

Quick reference: “090” size and what it usually means

Many furnaces use a size code like 090 to indicate an approximate 90,000 BTU input class (the exact input and output are on the rating plate).

Item What to use Why it matters
Heating capacity Rating plate BTU input/output Ensures correct sizing and safe operation
Electrical needs Installation guide electrical table Prevents nuisance trips and control damage
Service diagnostics Control board LED status codes Speeds troubleshooting

Why it matters

Reading the model number correctly helps us match the right Payne furnace parts (like a control board, igniter, or limit switch) and prevents ordering errors. It also helps you use the correct wiring, venting, and clearance requirements from the documentation.

If you are troubleshooting and need the “right number” fast

  • Write down the full model number exactly as printed
  • Record the serial number (this is usually what encodes the date)
  • Take a clear photo of the rating plate before ordering parts
  • Use the diagnostic LED and service label guidance in the PG8MAA042090 owner’s manual

Last updated: February 2026

A 90,000 BTU gas furnace typically heats about 1,800 to 2,700 sq. ft. in many U.S. homes, but the real coverage depends on climate zone, insulation, air sealing, and duct design. For your Payne PG8MAA042090, use the input rating on the unit data plate and sizing guidance in the PG8MAA042090 installation guide.

Quick sizing rule of thumb (what changes the square footage)

We see the biggest swings in “sq. ft. heated” from these factors:

  • Climate: colder regions need more BTUs per sq. ft.
  • Insulation and air leaks: poor insulation or drafts can cut coverage sharply
  • Ceiling height: tall ceilings increase the heated volume
  • Windows and doors: older, leaky windows raise heat loss
  • Ductwork condition: undersized or leaky ducts reduce delivered heat

Typical BTU-per-square-foot ranges

These ranges help translate a 90,000 BTU furnace into approximate square footage. (They are general planning numbers; a load calculation is the final word.)

Home condition and climate Typical BTU per sq. ft. Approx. sq. ft. from 90,000 BTU
Mild climate, good insulation 25 to 30 3,600 to 3,000
Moderate climate, average insulation 35 to 45 2,570 to 2,000
Cold climate, average to poor insulation 45 to 60 2,000 to 1,500

Why “90,000 BTU” is not always the heat you feel

Furnaces are often described by input BTU (fuel burned), but the home receives output BTU after efficiency losses. Also, installation details matter; the PG8MAA042090 installation instructions emphasize providing proper combustion air and venting, which supports safe, stable operation and consistent heat delivery. Review the venting and combustion air requirements in the PG8MAA042090 installation guide.

When to suspect the furnace is oversized or undersized

  • Short cycling (on and off frequently) can point to oversizing or airflow issues
  • Long run times and rooms that never reach set temperature can point to undersizing
  • High limit trips can indicate restricted airflow (dirty filter, closed registers, duct issues)
Symptom Common cause What to check first
Short cycles Oversized furnace, thermostat location Thermostat placement, staging/setup
Weak airflow Blower/duct restriction Filter, registers, return air
Limit switch trips Overheating from low airflow Filter, blower wheel, duct static

Last updated: February 2026

Common Payne gas furnace problems (including the Payne PG8MAA042090) usually come down to airflow restrictions, ignition or flame-sensing issues, venting or combustion-air problems, and safety switch trips. These faults often show up as no heat, short cycling, or a blower that runs without steady heat; our PG8MAA042090 installation guide helps confirm the setup items that commonly trigger these symptoms.

Most common symptoms and what they usually point to

  • No heat, blower runs: ignition failure, flame sensor issue, or control not proving flame
  • Short cycling (starts then stops): overheating from low airflow, limit switch opening, or venting/pressure issues
  • Runs but weak heat: incorrect gas input, duct/return restrictions, or low temperature rise
  • Frequent shutdowns: contaminated combustion air, venting problems, or safety switch trips
  • Unusual burner behavior: burner/orifice issues, improper manifold pressure, or poor combustion air

Model-relevant causes called out in the installation guidance

The PG8MAA series guidance highlights several installation and operating conditions that commonly create repeat furnace problems:

Common issue What causes it What you can check safely
Condensation and corrosion Return air too cold, low gas input, low temperature rise Replace filter, open registers, keep return-air path clear
Premature wear and nuisance problems Oversized furnace and short cycling Thermostat cycle rate settings, airflow restrictions
Corrosion and component damage Combustion air contaminated by household chemicals Keep bleach, aerosols, solvents away from combustion-air area
Venting-related shutdowns Poor vent condition or improper venting practices Look for obvious vent disconnections; have venting inspected

Parts that commonly fail when symptoms persist

If basic airflow and venting checks look good, these parts are frequent culprits on many gas furnaces:

Why it matters

Many “bad furnace” complaints are actually preventable conditions (restricted airflow, short cycling from oversizing, or contaminated combustion air). Fixing those root causes protects the heat exchanger and reduces repeated safety shutdowns.

Last updated: February 2026

For the Payne gas furnace model PG8MAA042090, the furnace circuit board (also called the electronic control board) typically costs a few hundred dollars; for this model, our listed control board is $476.75 for the control board HK42FZ034.

What the circuit board does (and why price varies)

The control board is the furnace “brain”; it manages ignition timing, blower operation, and safety shutdowns, and it also uses an LED to display status codes.

Common reasons prices vary:

  • OEM vs. aftermarket availability
  • Board revisions and compatibility by model series
  • Included harnesses or mounting hardware
  • Supply and demand for older models
  • Return policy and warranty terms

Before you replace the board: quick checks that often save money

Because a control board is a higher-cost part, we recommend ruling out common causes first.

  • Verify the furnace door switch is fully closed
  • Check the circuit breaker and confirm power to the furnace
  • Confirm thermostat wiring is secure at R, W, Y, and G terminals
  • Look for a blown 3-amp fuse on the control (replace only with the same rating)
  • Read the LED status code and follow the diagnostic flow

If the blower runs longer than expected, remember many furnaces use a blower-OFF delay; the installation instructions note the control can be factory-set to a 120-second blower-OFF delay.

Helpful reference: symptoms vs. likely next step

Symptom What it often points to What to do next
No response to thermostat calls Power, door switch, thermostat circuit Confirm breaker, door switch, 24V signals
Repeated lockouts with status code Safety circuit or ignition issue Use LED code chart and wiring diagram
Blower runs after heat shuts off Normal blower-OFF delay setting Check delay settings in the guide

Parts and documents to use for this model

Why it matters

A misdiagnosed control board replacement can be expensive and may not fix the root cause (like a thermostat issue, blown fuse, or safety switch opening). Using the model-specific diagnostics helps you confirm the failure before buying parts.

Last updated: February 2026

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