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American Standard/Trane Thermistor Temperature Sensor for 3/4' Tubing

Free shipping on orders over $29.99

$22.00

$ 10 .99 $10.99

In Stock

About this item

  • OEM Component with Factory Warranty*
  • OEM Trane Component
  • Thermistor / Temperature Sensor
  • Commonly Used in Various Various American Standard & Trane GAF , GAM and TAM Air Handlers
  • Clamp for 3/4" Tubing


GENUINE TRANE / SERVICE FIRST COMPONENT!

Specifications: SENSOR; THERMISTOR TEMPERATURE SENSOR, 30 INCH BLACK LEAD WIRES, CLIP FOR 3/4 TUBING

  • Clamp for 3/4" Tube
  • Temperature Saturation Line Sensor
  • 30" Black Lead Wire

Replaces & Supersedes: SEN2134 SEN-2134 SEN02134 SEN2125 SEN02125 SEN-2125 SEN1810 SEN-1810 SEN01810 and others

Commonly Found in Various American Standard & Trane Air Handlers

BRAND NEW / OEM American Standard / Trane Component...this is not a 10 year old , surplus item or repackaged part...this is a brand new OEM Component with Manufacturer Warranty. Additional American Standard & Trane Products Available for Additional Information

Note : Images are for illustration only. Actual item may vary.


PoppeLePew
Reviewed in the United States on February 14, 2025
Exactly what I needed and shipped really quickly. Arrived much sooner than expected.
David Borisuk
Reviewed in the United States on May 18, 2024
This sensor was an exact match for my Trane TAM7 evaporator coil. It OHMed out at the correct temperatures for me based on the 'Thermal resistance and Voltage Table' that can be found in the TAM7 'Service Facts' manual. SOME DETAILS: It was ~70 *F in the house, my Trane TAM7 system off. On the OHMs setting of my multimeter, I placed the probes on the sensor leads, it gave me a reading of ~11.5 K ohms (11,500 ohms) which was in range of the 70*F found in the 'Thermal resistance and Voltage Table'. Also, after clipping on this thermistor sensor to the larger copper line of my evaporator coil (I believe it would be the Suction line when run in Cooling mode) I OHMed each lead to ground ( i.e. on the OHM setting, I touched one of the multimeter probes to one of the sensor leads and touched the other probe to the copper tubing near where the sensor was clipped on). It gave me reading of '.OL' (open line) which is correct since the sensor leads should not be grounded.