Once again another detailed diagnoses. I do a lot of grocery store refrigeration and hvac. I find myself doing more refrigeration so my hvac game has gone down. But watching your videos has been improving my game. Keep up the good work bud.
Great video. I wonder if your customers watch these videos. They are literally getting quality work. You went above and beyond on a unit that is ready to die.
I would talk to the owner for permission to acid test the oil and at the same time just replace both liquid and suction filters (in a month or two). Good choice on the filters!!! Sporlan was the only kind I ever used --- they never let me down!!! Overall, you've done a great job from what I can tell!!!!
As someone who isn't an HVAC tech, really appreciate your simple yet effective explanations of what the various bits of these units do and how they fit together. Unfortunately everyone skimps on PM in every industry... and the results are always bad.
Yes thankyou welcome bai good packge unit filter derited clean need must condesr cleand need gas checking low ok charged coil oil blocled fueshing all clend comer not good must be fueshing all coli evry thing cled and reparing staredok good oil block drear repellaledok ok thankyou gues shering
Chris. I love your proffesioalism/ work. I've been doing this trade probably 2x long as you have and once in a while I learn something else from you.. That's a compliment to you.. I'm sure your like me also with learning something new everyday. A bad day it is for me if I can't think of something new learned I don't understand CA though. Here in stupid IL no one would do or anyone pay what you do there vs. replacing. No offense in any of my comments. Hopefully you have not blocked me!?
Damn, now that looks like a unit that should be completely replaced hands down. But as the customer wishes right? At least it provided an opportunity to further practice your skills and prove to us and yourself once again that you can basically build a package unit from scratch! 👍 on the music
All that work in labor probably cost half or more of the cost of a new unit without even the benefit of a warranty. Miracles aren’t cheap and get charged accordingly, and if the customer is willing to pay them and sign off that the contractor is not liable or responsible for the unit’s performance or quality control more power to them. That thing may last less than a year and the customer may have to pull the trigger on the replacement anyway. The customer is throwing money away there for sure but hey, they are always right. 🤷♂️
Love to watch you busy as a service tech. Brings me back to my biggest love what i miss daily. You bring me back in memory lane, keep up the awesome work :)
This was a very informative video. It really helped me a lot because I was experiencing these same symptoms with a 4,5ton AC. Had restriction in the metering device
Just had this same exact problem today and heating up the metering devices didn't work, this video clears up why and answered all my questions. Whenever I come across a similar problem I remember watching one of your video from the past on it and gets me through those frustrating calls. -My boss always told me when I was an apprentice. "You should be paying me for me teaching you like the university does!" Haha thank you for your helpful content.
dude your videos are the best video's to teach apprentices anything HVAC servicing related I'm currently in my last year of study in Australia, and I've been in install work most of my years. these videos are the best! big ups !!!! keep posting
I love seeing timelapse/fast forward done to see all the work that goes into these units. Gives somewhat more understanding to what it takes to do the job right :) Love seeing your work and how you go about with diagnostic and repairs!! Thumbs up 👍
I've been watching you the last couple weeks and I'm in awe of you skills and dedication to the craft. Looking forward to learning more from the master.😊
the old saying is "those who can, do; those who cannot, teach". I am not certain that it's true but often sure seems to be. I love these videos and I have literally no interest personally in commercial HVAC. I enjoy the diagnostic process. The same sort of logic, I have used initially in automotive with vehicles, then as a career paramedic with humans, and with a computer networking business. The media are different but the logical process is spot on the same. Big picture, think about what is happening and what could fail. Rule out potential causes. Identify the problem and remediate.
Changing the orifices has about a 45% success rate. Too many times the evap itself has an issue internally. I did not think it was possible until I had done three units over five years and had a metering/suction pressure issue when the job was done. A new evap and header works 100% of the time, so they are all quoted that way. No muss, no fuss.
I appreciated the followup, clarification on the drain trap and cleanout setup. On previous vids, I have been concerned on how you prevented air backflow into the unit. The cap on the unit side is a perfect solution. Love the elevation steps for extra protection.
my colleagues also were amazed to what degree i disassembled beamer when i repaired them, without manuals or education into it "its´not rocket science"
Love your content, keep it up. Little tip, for anyone interested, on the first Tee for the condensate trap one can solder a female adapter and put a brass plug with some PTFE tape on it to produce a better seal on the suction side of your wet seal in your trap. Thank you again for sharing your knowledge with us.
cost is far higher, at least here in USA. he could smear it with a blue "locking" pipe thread compound and it would seal nearly perfect air tight ( at very low pressures)
What I’ve found that most often clogs the piston is high head pressure. When the condenser motor quits. This causes the compressor to run hot,breaking down the insulation of the windings. In the video I could see an after market motor. This is really bad with the larger Carriers with 2 motors. One quits and starts spinning backwards. 410 units are the worst. Always check the bearings on inspections. Replace them before they fail. Stay safe.
All the customer looks at are the costs not realizing that proper PM will drastically save money and cost less in the long run with fewer breakdowns as well! Great job Chris!
what I have found in Alaska roof top units, is they are clogged with cottonwood fuzz in the summer and snow drifts that cover the Entire unit and freeze the condenser coil and fans. because the units placed directly on the floor of the roof and the fans pull everything into the coils.
I used to use all copper RTU drains because the plumber's plastic pipe gets all brittle & cracks. I started using plastic electrical conduits for RTU drains. 10x better resistance to UV and cheaper than copper.
I used to live in a more urban area and one time I was working and this HVAC repair guy came in and was up on the fixing one of the things and he did it a few times but I was there this time. He found our porter gave him like 10 bucks and had him help pull the top.
I learned many hard lessons over the years ; If it makes better sense to replace the RTU ,price the repairs higher than the cost of a new RTU and the RTU get's replaced . It's always about money !
I have two carriers like that right now and have fixed multiple with cap tube and a piston flange. I talked to carrier tech support when a compressor went and told him I was going to instal those cap tubes also. He was like “why just blow it out with nitrogen” lol sure guy.
funnily those are my bedtime videos now... but they also teach me about hvacr more than i did know about heat pumps before. otherwise electronics guy / coder / sysadmin here, but i do know fair bit about power too
Do you ever send oils out to a lab for analysis? Wear metals, acidity, etc.,? You could probably send a sample of clean oil and dirty oil to Finning SOS Labs. Their tests are pretty cheap and it could give you an early warning in the case of the compressor you showed in this video.
I’ve had similar results with alternate refrigerants. They can be hard to dial in. I’ve had success with R-422B, but even it can be difficult depending on the system. I think we’d all like to use R-22 in a situation like that, but the cost is just sky high.
@@BullmastiffForce basically yes. We haven’t been able to produce or import any R-22 for about a year and a half. So, supply companies had stocked up, and just selling what they have left. Now the price is so high to buy a jug of R-22 you rarely see anyone using it.
What only the last two years?.... Here in Norway it was iligal to fill an exsisting system with R-22 in 2015. New system got banned in 2004. Now we only are allowed to change oil and filter without relese of the gas according to the F-Gas regulation.
@@einderha well they’ve been slowly cutting back production a little at a time for at least the ten years before production was completely halted 2 years ago. So, price has been going up for years. It’s only now that the price has become too expensive to consider. About 2 months ago I bought a 30 lb. drum and it was $1200. And it’s gone up more since then.
i love the 80's montage music, Just need you and your apprentice doing a jumping high five at the end of the clip lol. Shirts off preferred for bonus points. =D
I’m waiting on one of those headers to come in from backorder, wish I would’ve thought to just quote the whole evaporator. It might’ve pushed it over the replacement edge.😂
That oil is going to eat the roof. I would have advised replacing the whole unit. Did you say it was a 2004?? Let’s hope the compressor doesn’t fail. Seems like so much work for this old dog. I retired 16 years ago, and those units were old then. I think the cause of the restriction is the oil breaking down and forming wax in those offices. I’ve heard of that fix with the torch. Trane had the same setup. Oh, that insulation on the windings is not a wax. It’s like a baked on varnish. I’ve seem motor re winders apply it, and then bake the windings in an oven. The wire is insulated before it is wound into windings, and placed on the stator core, then they spray another layer, and put the whole thing in the oven. You’re right about acidic oil eating thru it. It can also fail with excessive starts and stops. Every time the motor starts the windings flex, and eventually wear off the insulation, and you get a turn to turn short. The insulation condition can be checked with a megger. I probably would have megged out that compressor, before I started with the repair, especially being that it’s had a rough life.
It must be code in your area, why are you putting crackhead candy on the roof???🤣🤣😂😂 Thanks for the video!!! 🥃🥃🍺🍺🍺🍇🏌🏻♀️ Stay safe. Retired (werk'n)keyboard super tech. Wear your safety glasses.
Damn Chris idk how you work in 121 degree Fahrenheit temperatures I understand is dry where you but man I was in an attic this summer it was over 135 in the attic and I damn near passed out for the heat up there! Nice work man, love what you do and your thought process makes for a damn good video bro! I love the closing words don’t change it for anyone, I love the thought process Chris!
thanks for another great video, I’ve been learning new stuff from your channel for past 2 years even more than my school man 🙏 also I wonder Changing a burned out compressor requires flushing the condenser And new filter dryer but how about evaporator do you flush them and if you do how can you make sure inside fixed metering device is clear and dry , can nitrogen and deep vacuum get that rx11 out of metering device ?
I believe dirty condensors cook the oil in my experience. Never had a problem cleaning condenser like that . Used good coil cleaner on both sides. Then looked though coil light and eyes. Didn't care that much how coil looked . I'd cleaned till looked clear . Just my say. Have a good day.
I wanna work with you. Very detail oriented and like your style. Just wanna know why a copper drain. Think if I was to come across it I would take it and replace it with PVC. Love your videos
Great video as always! But i am surprised that with all those repairs you didn't retrofit the refrigerant ? R22 just vanished here and we still have 2000 pounds system running on it. I don't really work on a/c maybe it's different on system under a certain tonnage. Keep it up!
I noticed your re-plumbing the drain with copper, is that a state requirement/code issue, or due to being on a roof, and uv exposure, is why not being done with PVC pipe?
Its for exactly as you said: UV exposure reasons. PVC will get brittle and crack over time from UV exposure leading to a leaking drain. I was frankly surprised he didn't spray paint that new drain piping black to try and throw off crack heads from stealing it, but he may not have had time and will do that on the follow-up visit.
I'm no HVAC expert, but an iced coil usually means something's gone wrong. I like that you took the entire unit apart and looked at everything. I like the music you used. Sounds like a MIDI synthesizer created it. Did you make it yourself, or is it available somewhere that I can find it?
Thanks for sharing very good stuff appreciate you sir. I work in a hotel that water source heat pumps in every room. Some have suction line driers they all have reversing valves. I have the most unusual data that I never studied about. The suction line driers and the reversing valves are pressure drop points so the line gets colder as it approaches the compressor.. the refrigerant is colder at the in take of the comp than at the outlet of the evap. It makes it rather strange to check system charge. Basically there is negative superheat on the units. btw most of the units are 30+ years old. My question is which reading should I use to determine superheat?
Pressure drops are not good and need to be addressed, I will discuss this on my Livestream this evening 9/6/21 @ 5:PM (pacific) on UA-cam, come over and check it out ua-cam.com/video/HZjHAYTULSo/v-deo.html
Once again another detailed diagnoses. I do a lot of grocery store refrigeration and hvac. I find myself doing more refrigeration so my hvac game has gone down. But watching your videos has been improving my game. Keep up the good work bud.
Great video. I wonder if your customers watch these videos. They are literally getting quality work. You went above and beyond on a unit that is ready to die.
80's music brazing.. excellent, cant ask for a better video!
Great guitar! Falcon Dives though, not divas
I'm diggin the 80s California summer vibe music.
It’s synthwave
I would talk to the owner for permission to acid test the oil and at the same time just replace both liquid and suction filters (in a month or two). Good choice on the filters!!! Sporlan was the only kind I ever used --- they never let me down!!! Overall, you've done a great job from what I can tell!!!!
I thought copper thieves had hit this unit hard when I saw the thumbnail.
Same
As someone who isn't an HVAC tech, really appreciate your simple yet effective explanations of what the various bits of these units do and how they fit together.
Unfortunately everyone skimps on PM in every industry... and the results are always bad.
Yes thankyou welcome bai good packge unit filter derited clean need must condesr cleand need gas checking low ok charged coil oil blocled fueshing all clend comer not good must be fueshing all coli evry thing cled and reparing staredok good oil block drear repellaledok ok thankyou gues shering
Chris. I love your proffesioalism/ work. I've been doing this trade probably 2x long as you have and once in a while I learn something else from you.. That's a compliment to you.. I'm sure your like me also with learning something new everyday.
A bad day it is for me if I can't think of something new learned
I don't understand CA though. Here in stupid IL no one would do or anyone pay what you do there vs. replacing.
No offense in any of my comments.
Hopefully you have not blocked me!?
No offense taken bud, thanks for watching!
Damn, now that looks like a unit that should be completely replaced hands down. But as the customer wishes right? At least it provided an opportunity to further practice your skills and prove to us and yourself once again that you can basically build a package unit from scratch! 👍 on the music
Always look at the positive side things, 👍
Lol
All that work in labor probably cost half or more of the cost of a new unit without even the benefit of a warranty. Miracles aren’t cheap and get charged accordingly, and if the customer is willing to pay them and sign off that the contractor is not liable or responsible for the unit’s performance or quality control more power to them. That thing may last less than a year and the customer may have to pull the trigger on the replacement anyway. The customer is throwing money away there for sure but hey, they are always right. 🤷♂️
Love to watch you busy as a service tech. Brings me back to my biggest love what i miss daily. You bring me back in memory lane, keep up the awesome work :)
I love the look back to 1st video...
So professional!
Great work, exceptional video!
Bronx Love brother
I am an electrician by trade, I love watching your videos, how you diagnose and repair and being very professional throughout.
I’ve cleared them in the past… 80% success rate… only did it on units that were scheduled for a changeout but needed it done to buy customer time
This was a very informative video. It really helped me a lot because I was experiencing these same symptoms with a 4,5ton AC. Had restriction in the metering device
Just had this same exact problem today and heating up the metering devices didn't work, this video clears up why and answered all my questions. Whenever I come across a similar problem I remember watching one of your video from the past on it and gets me through those frustrating calls.
-My boss always told me when I was an apprentice. "You should be paying me for me teaching you like the university does!" Haha thank you for your helpful content.
I will discuss this on my Livestream this evening 8/9/21 @ 5:PM (pacific) on UA-cam come over and check it out ua-cam.com/video/exNsJRteDOU/v-deo.html
dude your videos are the best video's to teach apprentices anything HVAC servicing related
I'm currently in my last year of study in Australia, and I've been in install work most of my years. these videos are the best!
big ups !!!! keep posting
I love seeing timelapse/fast forward done to see all the work that goes into these units. Gives somewhat more understanding to what it takes to do the job right :) Love seeing your work and how you go about with diagnostic and repairs!! Thumbs up 👍
I've been watching you the last couple weeks and I'm in awe of you skills and dedication to the craft. Looking forward to learning more from the master.😊
That’s completely nuts. I mean I guess it might be marginally cheaper than replacement. But you got some time into that 😁
Here I just completed my HVAC course with ATI and yet how you explain things is leagues better than the last few instructors I had.
the old saying is "those who can, do; those who cannot, teach". I am not certain that it's true but often sure seems to be. I love these videos and I have literally no interest personally in commercial HVAC.
I enjoy the diagnostic process. The same sort of logic, I have used initially in automotive with vehicles, then as a career paramedic with humans, and with a computer networking business. The media are different but the logical process is spot on the same. Big picture, think about what is happening and what could fail. Rule out potential causes. Identify the problem and remediate.
Love the music when soldering and brazing!! It's like "How It's Made" but better!!
Changing the orifices has about a 45% success rate. Too many times the evap itself has an issue internally. I did not think it was possible until I had done three units over five years and had a metering/suction pressure issue when the job was done. A new evap and header works 100% of the time, so they are all quoted that way. No muss, no fuss.
I appreciated the followup, clarification on the drain trap and cleanout setup. On previous vids, I have been concerned on how you prevented air backflow into the unit. The cap on the unit side is a perfect solution. Love the elevation steps for extra protection.
Thanks Chris, great video!
Thanks Danny!
Dude. Absolutely love the trick of putting some flux on the outside of the joint after soldering the drain. Makes it look great.
Yep - been soldering as a DIYer for a looooong time, never saw that one, my solder joints will look almost as awesome from now on!
Amazing how disassembled you had it and got it all back together!
my colleagues also were amazed to what degree i disassembled beamer when i repaired them, without manuals or education into it
"its´not rocket science"
Great video, Chris. The autopsy really shows the difference between orifices. Foamy oil is never good either.
Another great video as always. That oil looked terrible!
Dude that song you played during the brazing sequence was so Miami Vice 80’s! Made me feel like a kid again, LOL!
Great video Chris..... I have changed out the accurator quite a bit in past. Changing the evap looks to be much easier.... Nice job.
Ah yes a soldering montage with cool music!
Thanks again for the update !
Love your content, keep it up. Little tip, for anyone interested, on the first Tee for the condensate trap one can solder a female adapter and put a brass plug with some PTFE tape on it to produce a better seal on the suction side of your wet seal in your trap. Thank you again for sharing your knowledge with us.
cost is far higher, at least here in USA. he could smear it with a blue "locking" pipe thread compound and it would seal nearly perfect air tight ( at very low pressures)
@@throttlebottle5906 , this is very true. Or leave it like he had it as you said we are only talking about static pressure that’s very low.
What I’ve found that most often clogs the piston is high head pressure. When the condenser motor quits. This causes the compressor to run hot,breaking down the insulation of the windings. In the video I could see an after market motor. This is really bad with the larger Carriers with 2 motors. One quits and starts spinning backwards. 410 units are the worst. Always check the bearings on inspections. Replace them before they fail. Stay safe.
Great Job
Thank you for all of your help and knowledge.
Nice explanation of cause and effect.
I always watch your videos. I always learn something new. Thanks for everything. 🤙
All the customer looks at are the costs not realizing that proper PM will drastically save money and cost less in the long run with fewer breakdowns as well! Great job Chris!
what I have found in Alaska roof top units, is they are clogged with cottonwood fuzz in the summer and snow drifts that cover the Entire unit and freeze the condenser coil and fans. because the units placed directly on the floor of the roof and the fans pull everything into the coils.
That’s one expensive drain😂, great work as always Chris ✌🏻
I used to use all copper RTU drains because the plumber's plastic pipe gets all brittle & cracks. I started using plastic electrical conduits for RTU drains. 10x better resistance to UV and cheaper than copper.
Not sure of the quality though, i did not see any nitrogen purge running ;p
I would've painted it white the copper tweekers will steal it.lol
I used to live in a more urban area and one time I was working and this HVAC repair guy came in and was up on the fixing one of the things and he did it a few times but I was there this time. He found our porter gave him like 10 bucks and had him help pull the top.
Very nice when you take the time to do it the right way
0:31 That subcooling making my restriction senses tingle
Interesting videos, you do things most techs don't deal with on a regular basis.
I learned many hard lessons over the years ; If it makes better sense to replace the RTU ,price the repairs higher than the cost of a new RTU and the RTU get's replaced . It's always about money !
Nobody splits a coil! Well said!
I have to think you would be justify replacing the unit. Especially since it's a R-22 system. Great video.
Wow, that was sure a lot of work!
That brazing montage music was a jam, loved it. Always love when you do those!
ahhhh 80's synthwave... Wonderful stuff!
I like these HVACR you tubers....I never miss one.
Good to see you and your tech working together great video
Awesome videos! Thanks!
I have two carriers like that right now and have fixed multiple with cap tube and a piston flange. I talked to carrier tech support when a compressor went and told him I was going to instal those cap tubes also. He was like “why just blow it out with nitrogen” lol sure guy.
Looks like you rebuilt this whole unit. Good job by the way
So thorough..doing awsome job
Love the music while you were brazing the drain line
Soldering using oxy acetylene..
Another great skill to have..
Why are drains lines copper there vs PVC?
@@georgekolos5255 pvc cracks and gets brittle after baking in the sun for a couple years .
funnily those are my bedtime videos now... but they also teach me about hvacr more than i did know about heat pumps before. otherwise electronics guy / coder / sysadmin here, but i do know fair bit about power too
i think you missed the perfect opportunity to do a retrofit.great info. and vid, convert the old coil to capillary piston set up.
I’m not even mad about the silicone trick. Nice work my friend
Great guitar and work!
Im a college student with no knowledge about HVAC but your videos are well detailed man! Bless ya success in your work
You can learn this.
You will never starve with a trade.
Skills pay bills.
@@fixitallpaul4847 alright man! 😊
Great content, nice job Chris!
With those high daytime temps, they really need to do more complete pms.
Its nice to look ur videos. im working on thermo king and carrier transport reefers.
Do you ever send oils out to a lab for analysis? Wear metals, acidity, etc.,? You could probably send a sample of clean oil and dirty oil to Finning SOS Labs. Their tests are pretty cheap and it could give you an early warning in the case of the compressor you showed in this video.
I CALLED THIS HVAC MAKEOVER.
I’ve had similar results with alternate refrigerants. They can be hard to dial in. I’ve had success with R-422B, but even it can be difficult depending on the system. I think we’d all like to use R-22 in a situation like that, but the cost is just sky high.
Isn't R22 forbidden in th US ? In Europe it is a big no no to use any R22
@@BullmastiffForce basically yes. We haven’t been able to produce or import any R-22 for about a year and a half. So, supply companies had stocked up, and just selling what they have left. Now the price is so high to buy a jug of R-22 you rarely see anyone using it.
What only the last two years?.... Here in Norway it was iligal to fill an exsisting system with R-22 in 2015. New system got banned in 2004. Now we only are allowed to change oil and filter without relese of the gas according to the F-Gas regulation.
@@einderha well they’ve been slowly cutting back production a little at a time for at least the ten years before production was completely halted 2 years ago. So, price has been going up for years. It’s only now that the price has become too expensive to consider. About 2 months ago I bought a 30 lb. drum and it was $1200. And it’s gone up more since then.
Would have loved to see a timelapse of that whole job too :)
Wish I had a 🎵 music soundtrack playing in the background everytime I braze. No seriously, another great video!
In those Carrier cases I replace the restrictors and install capillaries...
Good job, explanation is awesome and good diagnosis.
i love the 80's montage music, Just need you and your apprentice doing a jumping high five at the end of the clip lol. Shirts off preferred for bonus points. =D
I used to like porn music too.
Thanks for thinking of mobile users with the on-screen link stuff! Can't use or even see those on the mobile site.
Green horn getting some hands on! Get it, dude!
I’m waiting on one of those headers to come in from backorder, wish I would’ve thought to just quote the whole evaporator. It might’ve pushed it over the replacement edge.😂
That oil is going to eat the roof. I would have advised replacing the whole unit. Did you say it was a 2004?? Let’s hope the compressor doesn’t fail. Seems like so much work for this old dog. I retired 16 years ago, and those units were old then. I think the cause of the restriction is the oil breaking down and forming wax in those offices. I’ve heard of that fix with the torch. Trane had the same setup. Oh, that insulation on the windings is not a wax. It’s like a baked on varnish. I’ve seem motor re winders apply it, and then bake the windings in an oven. The wire is insulated before it is wound into windings, and placed on the stator core, then they spray another layer, and put the whole thing in the oven. You’re right about acidic oil eating thru it. It can also fail with excessive starts and stops. Every time the motor starts the windings flex, and eventually wear off the insulation, and you get a turn to turn short. The insulation condition can be checked with a megger. I probably would have megged out that compressor, before I started with the repair, especially being that it’s had a rough life.
Next time I have to do some hardcore brazing I'm definitely going to play some '80s synth pop music.
Thank you for this video. I can't tell you how many people want to (customers) who just want to change the orifice.
Can be add a moisture sensor or mesaure the heat damping of oil like temperature rise/dc resistance rise at motor coils?
It must be code in your area, why are you putting crackhead candy on the roof???🤣🤣😂😂
Thanks for the video!!!
🥃🥃🍺🍺🍺🍇🏌🏻♀️
Stay safe.
Retired (werk'n)keyboard super tech. Wear your safety glasses.
The copper just lasts longer, with our uv exposure the pvc would be brittle and fragile within two years of being outside in the sun
Always enjoy your videos, Sir. Stay cool. Stay safe out there!
Damn Chris idk how you work in 121 degree Fahrenheit temperatures I understand is dry where you but man I was in an attic this summer it was over 135 in the attic and I damn near passed out for the heat up there! Nice work man, love what you do and your thought process makes for a damn good video bro! I love the closing words don’t change it for anyone, I love the thought process Chris!
Dude, freakin love the music you been adding.. that mixed with the OCD quality work gives my mind peace. 👍🏼
HVAC hero, awesome music
thanks for another great video, I’ve been learning new stuff from your channel for past 2 years even more than my school man 🙏 also
I wonder Changing a burned out compressor requires flushing the condenser
And new filter dryer but how about evaporator do you flush them and if you do how can you make sure inside fixed metering device is clear and dry , can nitrogen and deep vacuum get that rx11 out of metering device ?
I believe dirty condensors cook the oil in my experience. Never had a problem cleaning condenser like that . Used good coil cleaner on both sides. Then looked though coil light and eyes. Didn't care that much how coil looked . I'd cleaned till looked clear . Just my say. Have a good day.
i love your work
I wanna work with you. Very detail oriented and like your style. Just wanna know why a copper drain. Think if I was to come across it I would take it and replace it with PVC. Love your videos
Thanks for the sneak peek!
Try using tinning Flux makes sweating copper very easy. Great job love your channel.
The smallest of issues always lead to massive problems, wish some of the kit in the uk was as easy to work on, instead it's cramped in
Great video as always! But i am surprised that with all those repairs you didn't retrofit the refrigerant ? R22 just vanished here and we still have 2000 pounds system running on it.
I don't really work on a/c maybe it's different on system under a certain tonnage.
Keep it up!
I dig the montage
A lot of carrier systems l have changed their metering device to capillary tubes. Result comes far better
I noticed your re-plumbing the drain with copper, is that a state requirement/code issue, or due to being on a roof, and uv exposure, is why not being done with PVC pipe?
It is code in most states.
Its for exactly as you said: UV exposure reasons. PVC will get brittle and crack over time from UV exposure leading to a leaking drain. I was frankly surprised he didn't spray paint that new drain piping black to try and throw off crack heads from stealing it, but he may not have had time and will do that on the follow-up visit.
love your videos, question your music choice. where did you get THAT idea?
Ive always read that suction line filter/driers are to be removed and never meant to be permanently installed
I'm no HVAC expert, but an iced coil usually means something's gone wrong.
I like that you took the entire unit apart and looked at everything.
I like the music you used. Sounds like a MIDI synthesizer created it. Did you make it yourself, or is it available somewhere that I can find it?
He listed/credited the song and artist in the description of the video below the links to tools.
Nice 80's synth vibe with a Dave Gilmour like guitar.
Hey bro, I got ya: ua-cam.com/video/VMAb3IufRwk/v-deo.html
Nothing like 80's synthwave to relax after a tiring day :)
Why are suction line filter driers never installed on refrigeration systems after a grounded compressor?
Thanks for sharing very good stuff appreciate you sir. I work in a hotel that water source heat pumps in every room. Some have suction line driers they all have reversing valves. I have the most unusual data that I never studied about. The suction line driers and the reversing valves are pressure drop points so the line gets colder as it approaches the compressor.. the refrigerant is colder at the in take of the comp than at the outlet of the evap. It makes it rather strange to check system charge. Basically there is negative superheat on the units. btw most of the units are 30+ years old. My question is which reading should I use to determine superheat?
Pressure drops are not good and need to be addressed, I will discuss this on my Livestream this evening 9/6/21 @ 5:PM (pacific) on UA-cam, come over and check it out ua-cam.com/video/HZjHAYTULSo/v-deo.html