
EF32CW210 – FURNACE GAS VALVE (OEM, DIRECT, 1176929)
Carrier/Bryant EF32 OEM gas valves are direct factory replacements -- match the original part number exactly. EF32 series is purpose-built for Carrier/Bryant condensing furnaces (58CVA, 58MVB families) and won't drop into a Rheem or Goodman without an adapter kit. Before condemning the valve: verify 24V at the coil terminals during a heat call, and clean the flame sensor first. If you're getting Carrier error codes (4 + 3 = flame sense issue, not valve), don't replace this -- fix the flame sensor.
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 furnace won’t ignite and you’ve ruled out the ignitor and flame sensor, the gas valve may need replacement. This OEM Carrier valve is a direct replacement for specific Carrier, Bryant, and Payne furnace models.
Specs: 24V, direct ignition, natural gas, 3.5″ WC pressure, 1/2″ NPT connections
Replaces: 1176929, EF32CW210, EF32CW206, 36G24-618, 36J24-618
Fits: Carrier/Bryant/Payne: 58SC0A070E171112, 58STA090-13116, PG80ESAA60110D, PG80ESAA60110DAA
Need help? See our Furnace Not Heating 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
- TypeCarrier/Bryant OEM gas valve
- Coil Voltage24V AC
- Gas TypeNatural Gas (NG); LP conversion kit available
- OEM CompatibilityCarrier
Cross-reference numbers
This part replaces the following OEM and aftermarket numbers:
- 1176929
- EF32CW210
Not sure if your number matches? Call (214) 340-9421 or bring the old part in — bench-testing is free.
Fits these models
- Carrier / Bryant OEM gas valve (EF32 family) — direct factory replacement for Carrier / Bryant condensing furnaces
- Common Carrier model families: 58CVA, 58MVB, 58MEC, 58MVP, 58MTA, 58TUA — verify exact cross-reference to your model
- Does NOT drop into non-Carrier furnaces without adapter — verify model match before installing
How do I know if my gas valve is bad?
Verify there's 24V at the valve coil terminals during a heat call -- if there's no voltage, the board (or a safety switch upstream) is the problem, not the valve. If 24V IS present and the valve doesn't open (no audible click, no gas flow), the valve is bad. Bring it in and we'll bench-test it.
1-stage vs 2-stage gas valve -- can I swap one for the other?
No. 2-stage valves have a second, lower-input solenoid (often called "low-fire") that the control board commands separately. A single-stage furnace board doesn't have a low-fire output, so a 2-stage valve will only ever run on high. Replace a 2-stage with a 2-stage; replace a 1-stage with a 1-stage.
Slow-open vs fast-open -- does it matter?
Slow-open valves ramp gas flow over 3-7 seconds, which is gentler on the ignitor and reduces flame-rollout risk on standing-pilot or older furnaces. Fast-open valves open immediately -- required on most modern HSI-equipped furnaces because the spark/HSI window is short. Match what your unit's data plate calls for.
What's the difference between Honeywell VR and White-Rodgers 36?
Honeywell VR is the older / more common platform; White-Rodgers 36 is the direct cross-replacement on most furnaces. Most VR valves cross to a 36-series equivalent and vice versa -- but verify pipe size (1/2" x 1/2" vs 3/4" x 3/4"), stage count, and connector pinout match before swapping brands. We'll match at the counter.
Can I use natural gas valves on LP propane?
Yes, but you MUST convert the valve with the LP conversion kit (different regulator spring + jets). Burning LP through a NG-set valve will cause flame impingement, sooting, and CO production. Get the conversion kit before installing.




