How to look up AC model number?
To look up your AC model number, we check the unit’s rating plate (data tag) and match the Model or M/N field to the parts listing. For this Goodman outdoor unit, the model you’re working with is CK49-1; confirm it on the tag before ordering parts.
Where to find the model number on an AC
Most air conditioner and heat pump outdoor units have a metal or foil rating plate on the cabinet. Check these common spots:
- On the side panel of the outdoor condenser cabinet
- Behind the service/access panel (near the electrical compartment)
- Inside the control panel area (after removing the small access cover)
- Near the refrigerant line connections (suction and liquid lines)
- Occasionally on the back panel if the unit faces a wall
For the exact label location and how the model and serial are formatted, use the owner's manual.
What the model number looks like (and what to write down)
When you find the tag, record the information exactly as printed.
- Model (M/N): the model number used to match parts (example: CK49-1)
- Serial (S/N): helps identify production run details
- Electrical ratings: voltage and phase (useful for troubleshooting)
- Refrigerant type: often listed as R-22 or R-410A on older/newer systems
How we use the model number to get the right parts
Once you have the model number, we use it to pull the correct diagrams and part list for your Goodman CK49-1 outdoor unit.
| You have | Use it for | Example result |
|---|---|---|
| Model number | Finding the correct parts breakdown | CK49-1 parts list |
| Serial number | Confirming exact variation when needed | Matches the correct revision |
| Part number/ID | Ordering the exact replacement | Grommet B1339530 |
Why it matters
Air conditioner parts like grommets, wiring components, and cabinet hardware can look similar across models. Using the exact model number prevents ordering a part that fits a different Goodman series or revision.
Ordering tip
After you confirm the tag reads CK49-1, you can order replacement parts from the parts list for this model, or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
What is the average lifespan of a Goodman AC unit?
A Goodman central AC or heat pump outdoor unit like model CK49-1 typically lasts 12 to 15 years. With correct installation, clean airflow, and yearly service, it commonly reaches 15 to 20 years. For model-specific care and maintenance intervals, use the CK49-1 owner's manual.
Typical lifespan range (what to expect)
Most Goodman outdoor condenser units fall into these real-world ranges:
- 12 to 15 years: common average lifespan
- 15 to 20 years: well-maintained systems with good installation and airflow
- Under 12 years: often tied to poor maintenance, restricted airflow, or electrical issues
- 20+ years: possible, but usually with consistent upkeep and mild operating conditions
| Condition | What it usually means | Likely outcome |
|---|---|---|
| Annual maintenance, clean coil, correct refrigerant charge | Lower strain on compressor and fan motor | Longer life |
| Dirty coil, clogged filter, blocked outdoor airflow | Higher pressures and heat | Shorter life |
| Frequent short-cycling | More starts, more electrical stress | Shorter life |
What shortens the life of an outdoor AC unit
These are the most common lifespan killers for an air conditioner heat pump outside unit:
- Dirty condenser coil (heat cannot leave the system efficiently)
- Restricted indoor airflow (dirty filter, blocked returns, dirty evaporator coil)
- Low refrigerant charge from a leak
- Electrical problems (weak capacitor, pitted contactor, loose wiring)
- Poor pad leveling or vibration that stresses tubing and mounts
Maintenance that adds years
We recommend these practical habits for a Goodman unit like CK49-1:
- Replace or clean the indoor air filter on schedule
- Keep at least 2 feet of clearance around the outdoor unit; remove leaves and debris
- Rinse the outdoor coil gently when it is dirty (power off first)
- Have a technician check refrigerant charge, electrical components, and defrost controls (if heat pump)
- Fix vibration and rubbing lines; small isolation parts such as a grommet B1339530 help reduce wear where lines or wires pass through panels
Why it matters
Once an AC unit gets near the end of its lifespan, efficiency drops and repairs become more frequent. Preventing airflow restrictions and electrical stress is the most reliable way to protect the compressor, which is the costliest component.
If you need replacement parts for your Goodman CK49-1, start with the parts list for this model, or search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026
What is the most expensive part to replace on an AC unit?
On a Goodman CK49-1 air conditioner heat pump outside unit, the most expensive part to replace is typically the compressor because it is the sealed-system “pump” that moves refrigerant and often requires significant labor. In some repairs, a coil or major electrical control can also be among the highest-cost items.
Most expensive AC parts (typical cost drivers)
These are the components that most often drive the highest repair totals on an outdoor AC or heat pump unit:
- Compressor: highest part cost and highest labor complexity (sealed system work)
- Condenser coil: expensive component; replacement can involve refrigerant recovery and recharging
- Evaporator coil (indoor coil): can be costly when matched-system requirements apply
- Main control board or inverter module (if equipped): high part cost on some systems
- Fan motor: usually less than a compressor, but can still be a major repair depending on access and wiring condition
Quick comparison: what usually makes a repair “expensive”
| Component | Why it gets expensive | What you may notice first |
|---|---|---|
| Compressor | Sealed-system labor, refrigerant handling, high part cost | Unit hums, trips breaker, no cooling/heating |
| Coil (condenser/evaporator) | Large component, refrigerant work, leak risk | Weak performance, icing, oil stains, hissing |
| Control board/module | Specialized electronics, model-specific parts | No start, erratic operation, fan runs wrong |
| Fan motor | Labor plus electrical diagnosis | Outdoor fan not spinning, overheating shutdown |
What we recommend checking before assuming “compressor failure”
A lot of “dead unit” symptoms come from simpler issues. Before planning for a major replacement, we typically verify:
- Power and disconnect: breaker, outdoor disconnect, and wiring connections
- Contactor and capacitor (common failure points on many outdoor units)
- Condenser fan operation: a failed fan can overheat the compressor
- Coil cleanliness and airflow: restricted airflow raises pressures and stress
- Basic electrical tests: resistance/continuity checks where appropriate
For safe electrical testing steps and tool guidance, use the owner's manual.
Why it matters
If the compressor or a coil is truly the failure, the repair total often reflects both the part and the specialized labor involved. Confirming the root cause first helps avoid replacing a high-cost component when the real issue is a capacitor, contactor, wiring, or airflow problem.
Parts for this model
For small but important vibration and wire-protection items used during service, we list model-specific parts such as the grommet B1339530. You can also search by model number CK49-1 on Sears PartsDirect if you are building a full repair list.
Last updated: February 2026
What tonnage is CK49-1?
For the Goodman CK49-1 outdoor air conditioner and heat pump unit, the “49” in the model number indicates a nominal capacity of about 49,000 BTU per hour, which is approximately 4 tons. For the exact rated capacity for your specific configuration, confirm it on the unit data plate and in the owner's manual.
Quick tonnage math (how we get 4 tons)
Air conditioner tonnage is based on BTU per hour:
- 1 ton = 12,000 BTU/hr
- 49,000 BTU/hr ÷ 12,000 BTU/hr per ton ≈ 4.08 tons
- Manufacturers typically round this to a nominal 4-ton class
| Model clue | What it usually means | Approx. capacity |
|---|---|---|
| “49” in CK49-1 | Nominal BTU class | ~49,000 BTU/hr |
| Nominal tons | BTU/hr ÷ 12,000 | ~4 tons |
How to confirm the exact capacity on your unit
We recommend verifying tonnage using the rating label (data plate) on the outdoor unit because exact capacity can vary by match-up and rating conditions.
- Locate the data plate on the condenser cabinet (often inside the service panel area)
- Look for Cooling capacity or BTU/h (sometimes listed as “Capacity”)
- Note the full model and any revision numbers (CK49-1 plus any suffix)
- Match those details to the specifications section in the owner's manual
Why it matters
Correct tonnage helps prevent comfort and efficiency problems. An oversized unit can short-cycle and struggle with humidity control; an undersized unit can run constantly and still not keep up on hot days.
Parts note for CK49-1
If you are ordering replacement parts for your Goodman CK49-1, match parts by model number and the part listing for your unit. For example, the grommet B1339530 is a small but important vibration and wire-protection part used in many outdoor-unit applications. You can also search by model number on Sears PartsDirect.
Last updated: February 2026





