If you are running your central heating/air conditioner unit to cool your home, moisture will condense on the cooling coil inside the unit and should drain out to the outside or will be pumped out. This will lower the humidity in your house.
The question is to vague, but I suspect a coil pan leaking 90% or better furnaces are also condensing and generate water.
Is there a flame in the furnace. Precisely where is this air coming from and how strong is it?
A furnace does NOT have water... A boiler has water .. NICE trick question
check your furnace or kitchen.
Depends on the manufacture of the water furnace. Look at the data sheet or data plate on the furnace of contact the manufacture.
Water leaking from a furnace most likely occurs from the heat of the furnace which transforms into a liquid. The best way to avoid the leak is to put your furnace at a lower temperature.
no heat would flow
no heat would flow
I don't know it's a new furnace and the outside unit was checked. everything runs good except that the air is not coming out of the vents cold it's barely cold.
The water being held in the water tank when the furnace shuts off is at a set temp, the water tank hopefully is insulated, as time passes, the water temp has to drop because the furnace has not come on to maintain the set temp, also the controller could be faultly that controls the water temp for the hot water heater, the only time you have hot water is when the furnace runs.
Yes you can do that. I had an oil fired furnace that also heated the hot water in a coil inside the furnace. I got an electric hot water heater and had a plumber disconnect the coil in the furnace and hook up the electric hot water heater. No problems after four years.
with water =)
A furnace heats air; a boiler heats water. --The HVAC Veteran