
B1370115 – HEAT KIT LIMIT SWITCH (L150°)
Heat kit limit switches are the safety cutoff on electric heat strip assemblies — they trip when strip temperature exceeds the rating (typically L150° for entry-level kits, higher for sealed kits). If yours trips, the cause is almost ALWAYS restricted airflow (filter, blower, ducting) — fix that first. Match the L-rating exactly to your equipment's spec; wrong rating either nuisance-trips or fails to protect against strip fire.
10226 Plano Rd, Suite 104, Dallas TX 75238
Questions? Call or text (214) 340-9421
Mon–Fri 10 am – 7 pm | Sat 10 am – 3 pm
If your air handler is short-cycling, a failed limit switch may be the cause. This limit switch protects Goodman/Amana electric heat strips — opens at 150°F to shut down the heat kit before it overheats the air handler.
Specs: Opens at 150°F, L150, designed for heat kit applications
Replaces: B1370115
Fits: Goodman and Amana air handlers with electric heat kits calling for B1370115. Bring your model number — we’ll verify.
Need help? See our Furnace Short Cycling Guide.
In stock at Open To Public HVAC Parts in Dallas. We test parts at the counter before you buy. Call or text (214) 340-9421.
Specs
- TypeElectric heat kit limit switch
- Trip TemperatureL150°F
- OEM CompatibilityUniversal
Cross-reference numbers
This part replaces the following OEM and aftermarket numbers:
- B1370115
Not sure if your number matches? Call (214) 340-9421 or bring the old part in — bench-testing is free.
Fits these models
- Heat kit safety limit switch — protects electric heat strip assemblies from over-temp conditions caused by restricted airflow
- Common applications: most residential electric heat kits (Rheem RXBH, Goodman HKS, First Co)
- Match the L-rating EXACTLY to your heat kit's spec
What does L150° mean on a limit switch?
The L-rating is the trip temperature in Fahrenheit. L150° opens (breaks the safety circuit) when surface temp hits 150°F. Common ratings on residential furnaces: L120°-L260°. Match your equipment's data-plate spec EXACTLY — wrong rating = nuisance trips OR no protection.
Auto-reset vs manual-reset — which do I need?
Match what your equipment was designed for. AUTO-reset switches close back when temp drops below the reset point (convenient, but can hide developing problems). MANUAL-reset switches require pressing the button after each trip (safer because it forces you to investigate). Most furnace primary limits are auto-reset; secondary / rollout safeties are manual-reset.
Why does my limit switch keep tripping?
The switch isn't usually the problem — it's doing its job. Common root causes: clogged air filter (most common), dirty blower wheel, undersized return duct, closed-off supply registers, failing blower motor, slipping blower belt (older units), cracked heat exchanger, oversized burner. Diagnose the airflow / heat-source issue before just swapping the switch.
What's the difference between micro and 3"/7" disc?
"Micro" is a snap-disc style limit switch (small, ~1" diameter housing, common on modern furnaces). 3" / 7" refers to the disc diameter on older bimetallic limit controls and combo fan&limit units. Verify your existing switch's style + mount geometry before swapping; they are NOT interchangeable.
Can I jumper the limit switch?
NO. The limit switch is a safety device protecting against fire and heat-exchanger damage. Bypassing it can cause carbon monoxide buildup, melted ductwork, cracked heat exchangers, or worse. If yours trips, fix the airflow / heat-source cause.
How long should a limit switch last?
15-25 years typical. Most failures are caused by the underlying root cause (repeated over-temp cycles fatigue the bimetal disc) rather than the switch itself. Replace the air filter on schedule and the limit lasts.




