
STC4228 – TEMPERATURE FUSE LINK (L235°, 15A)
If your temp fuse link is blown, find out WHY before swapping — it's a one-shot safety device. 90% of blown links on electric heat strips are restricted airflow (filter, blower, ducting). On gas furnaces it's flame impingement. Match the L-rating exactly; wrong temp = either no protection or constant nuisance trips. Bring the old link in for L-rating and connector match.
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
A one-time thermal fuse link that opens (blows) at 228°F to protect HVAC equipment from overheating. If your furnace or heater has shut down and you find a blown fuse link, replace it with the correct temperature rating. Also investigate what caused the overheat — a clogged filter, failed blower motor, or blocked ductwork are common causes.
Specs: 15A, opens at 228°F (109°C), one-time-use thermal cutout
Replaces: NTC227, STC4228
Fits: Furnaces, electric heaters, and HVAC equipment using a 228°F thermal fuse link for overheat protection
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
- TypeTemperature fuse link (one-time)
- Trip Temperature235°F
- Amp Rating15 A
- Type BehaviorOne-time use (replace after trip)
- OEM CompatibilityUniversal
Cross-reference numbers
This part replaces the following OEM and aftermarket numbers:
- NTC227
- STC4228
Not sure if your number matches? Call (214) 340-9421 or bring the old part in — bench-testing is free.
Fits these models
- Universal temperature fuse link with 15A pass-through rating — safety cutoff for electric heat strips and gas furnace plenums
- Match the L-rating (trip temp) and amp rating to your existing link
- Common applications: most residential air handlers with electric heat strips (Rheem, Goodman, Trane, Carrier, York, Lennox, First Co)
What does L333° mean on a temp fuse link?
The L-rating is the trip temperature in Fahrenheit. L333° trips at 333°F. Common ratings: L235°, L257°, L300°, L333°, L377°, L438°, L468°. Match your unit's data plate exactly — these are not interchangeable.
Why does my temp fuse link keep blowing?
On electric heat strips: usually restricted airflow — clogged filter, dirty blower wheel, undersized return, closed-off supplies. The strips overheat without enough air moving across them. On gas furnaces: usually flame impingement from a cracked heat exchanger, misaligned burners, or wrong manifold pressure. Fix the root cause; don't just keep swapping links.
One-time vs resettable — which do I need?
Look at what your existing link is. One-time ceramic / non-ceramic links are SAFETY devices designed to fail permanently — they're catastrophic-failure protection. Resettable breakers are convenience devices for short-cycling. They're NOT interchangeable; match what your equipment was designed for.
Can I bypass the fuse link with a jumper wire?
No. The fuse link is a safety device — bypassing it can cause fires, melted ductwork, CO production from incomplete combustion, or worse. If yours is blown, replace it. Period.
How do I tell if the fuse link is blown?
Use a multimeter on continuity / resistance mode. A healthy link reads near 0 ohms (closed circuit). A blown link reads infinite / OL (open circuit). Visual inspection helps too — blown links often have a visible gap or melted appearance.




