Water in condensing gas furnaces condensing furnaces also known as high efficiency furnaces are generally in the 90 to 97 efficiency range.
Furnace exhaust fan full of water.
Avoid double trapping and vent the drain after the trap to prevent airlocks.
If you have a condensation leak with a standard efficiency then its exhaust or flue pipe may be incorrectly sized.
Most furnaces will have at least 2 internal drains typically one for the heat exchanger and one for the vent usually at the inducer outlet or on the inducer housing the secondary heat exchanger outlet is sealed inside a plastic part called the collector box which is designed to collect the condensate and drain it out if the seal gets damaged the water will fill the inducer.
Look inside of the blower box for water accumulation.
Slope the drain line itself obviously.
First remove the drain tube and fitting.
Look in your install manual most manufacturers will call for the furnace to be installed with a slight forward pitch to allow condensate to drain from the heat exchanger.
You can identify a condensing furnace by the pvc vent pipe that allows exhaust gases to exit the appliance after they have cooled down.
Condensation from air conditioning coils contains bacteria that can form slime and clog the condensate pan drain tube.
You can prevent slime and eliminate drain tube clogs in two easy steps.
There should be no water involved with a standard efficiency furnace.
Water may accumulate due to a broken silver bladder or faulty insulation.
When you see water puddling around the furnace with the a c running you have a clogged condensate drain tube.
A standard efficiency furnace extracts some heat from the combustion gases and quickly vents them out the exhaust or flue pipe.