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I need your assistance troubleshooting mobile home gas furnace problems. Before you assume the furnace is the problem, remember that mobile homes have insulation and walls so thin that it cannot stand the heat in the kitchen or winds of a tornado. I know the jokes about a tornado in Arkansas and divorce in Oklahoma meaning someone is going to lose a trailer. I also know the furnace is set to heat, not fan, and not heating things up. I’m assuming you turned on the gas or propane or paid the electric bill. Of course. I would also ask if you’ve checked the breaker. It’s a gas furnace. Then the problem is not going to be because the heat pump lost refrigerant. It is also less likely to be because you left the thermostat on cool while turning up the temperature. I have checked to make sure the thermostat is reading the temperature right. And yes, the gas valve is set to open. If the circuit the gas furnace is connected to has a tripped breaker, it still won’t have the electric spark to trigger the ignitor. Oh, so even a gas furnace needs electricity, if even for a moment. And fans and blowers If the furnace turning on trips the breaker, I’d think there’s an electrical problem, though whether that’s the control board or other issues. The unit has been cleaned, so the thing should not be dying because there isn’t enough air coming through the filters. If the unit has been oiled, then there’s less chance the blower motors will go out, but that doesn’t mean it won’t. I’d know if the blower motors were not going by the silence. You could set the furnace to air only and turn on the fan at the thermostat to see if the fans at least run. If that doesn’t work, then you know the problem is the fan or fan motor or control board. A furnace with a dead fan will still heat up. And it may overheat because the air is not distributed before shutting down because it overheats. It should shut down if it overheats anyway. When the unit is newly shut down, feel it for things that are overheated, or check the control panel for overheating error messages. I do not know how to read the blinking lights on the furnace control panel. You might want to call an expert to look into the root causes, and someone other than a neighbor’s broke uncle who swears he can fix it on the cheap.