Goodman GM9S96 Furnace Problems & Error Codes — Overview
The Goodman GM9S96 is a 96% AFUE modulating gas furnace used in residential heating. This model uses an LED on the control board to flash codes that identify which safety or ignition fault stopped operation. The most frequent field problems are not board failures but airflow restrictions, pressure switch issues, and flame-proving faults. Dirty filters, blocked vents, cracked pressure hoses, failed hot surface igniters, and corroded flame sensors account for the majority of service calls on this furnace family.
Most Common Problems on This Model
- 3 flashes (pressure switch stuck open) Blocked vent or intake pipe, disconnected or cracked pressure switch hose, water in the tubing, or inducer motor not creating enough draft to close the switch during startup.
- 4 flashes (open high limit switch) Restricted airflow from a clogged filter, blocked return or supply registers, dirty blower wheel, or failed blower motor causing the heat exchanger to overheat and trip the limit.
- 1 flash (system lockout / ignition failure) Failed hot surface igniter, dirty or corroded flame sensor, gas supply turned off or interrupted, faulty gas valve, or exceeded ignition retry limit after multiple failed attempts.
- 7 flashes (low flame signal) Flame sensor coated with carbon or corrosion, poor electrical grounding or reversed polarity at the furnace, low gas pressure, or weak flame carryover between burners.
- 5 flashes (flame sensed with gas valve off) Gas valve stuck open or leaking, control board falsely detecting flame due to electrical noise or grounding fault, or contaminated flame sensor creating a false signal.
- 6 flashes (open rollout switch) Blocked vent causing flame rollout, cracked or restricted heat exchanger, combustion air problem, or rollout switch tripped and needs manual reset after the cause is corrected.
- Continuous or rapid flashing (reversed polarity) Hot and neutral wires reversed at the furnace disconnect or breaker, incorrect transformer wiring, or grounding defect in the 115 VAC supply causing ignition and flame-sense problems.
- 8 flashes (ignitor error) Cracked or broken hot surface igniter, loose wire connection at the igniter plug, or control board not sending power to the igniter circuit.
Parts That Commonly Fail
| Part | Notes |
|---|---|
| Hot surface igniter | Amazon | Cracks after 5-7 years from thermal cycling, often breaks during handling or cleaning |
| Flame sensor | Amazon | Corrodes and coats with carbon over time, causing low microamp signal and ignition lockout |
| Pressure switch and tubing | Amazon | Switch contacts fail or hoses crack, split, or fill with condensate blocking draft signal |
| Inducer motor | Amazon | Bearings wear out after 10-15 years, motor hums or fails to spin, preventing pressure switch closure |
When to Call a Pro
Call a licensed HVAC technician for all gas valve work, gas pressure testing, heat exchanger inspection, refrigerant or electrical diagnostics, and any situation where you smell gas or see flame rollout. If you have replaced the igniter and flame sensor, checked all hoses and filters, and the furnace still locks out or flashes a code, a tech with a multimeter and manometer can test gas pressure, flame current, inducer draft, and board outputs to isolate the fault. Any cracked heat exchanger or suspected gas leak requires immediate professional service and a furnace shutdown.