After buying my first home back in August, these videos help. Google has also been a big help to assure me it's working properly. I panicked the other day when I heard the valve switch when it went into defrost mode. When I went outside, the compressor was running, but not the fan. Of course the worst thing popped into my head, like great it's broke. Then after some researching, I was reassured it was working as it should. So much to learn about these heat pumps.
Phillip you missed the entertaining part of the defrost cycle. When it ends, the outdoor fan comes back on and since the coil was heated, it will blow a big cloud of water vapor (depending on conditions) which looks like a big cloud of smoke.
I'm new to the hvac world and I understood that if it was blowing hot/warm air out of the outdoor unit it was making it cold inside and vice versa but this video connected so many things I thought I understood
This is so elegant in it's simplicity, I am glad I was curious as to how it worked. Also I am surprised these haven't been implemented absolutely everywhere 20 years ago.
Thanks for the valve overview - you really provide a valuable service for the industry. Just one thing that would be helpful be is if you go over the failure modes of a reversing valve. From your overview, it seems pretty bullet proof.
I have seen only two failures. One is when the sliding piston gets stuck and then it will only run in one mode. Not so bad if you're calling for heat and the reversing valve is stuck in the heating position but then it is really bad when you have a call down the line for cooling on a hot day and the unit is putting out hot air. The second one is much more difficult to diagnose for someone who does not have a good understanding of a refrigerant cycle. I have seen reversing valves leak internally, and what happens is a large part of the hot gas from the compressor discharge leaks in the reversing valve directly into the suction line of the compressor. It will sort of equalize the system pressure and resemble conditions of bad compressor valves but by taking superheat, subcooling and measuring temperatures of all the lines in and out of the reversing valve you can differentiate between the two conditions.
@@lilkenny123123 Hi Kenneth. I am recently retired but I worked as an HVAC tech for about 40 years. I worked in some high-volume shops and after a while you basically see just about every problem you could imagine.
This is great. Thanks for clearly explaining this so well and providing the visuals to go with it. Helps alot in understanding how a heat pump systems works.
Thank you so much for this video. I work for AC manufacturer and always been interested in stuff like that. Years of study but only practice verifies knowledge and videos like yours are very helpful to imagine and understand operation of the individual parts. I discovered you by reversing valve ;) I subscribed your channel and want to wish you all the best :)
Those who thumbs down this video should not be a air conditioner or refrigeration tech please you need to get a job what fits you as a tech on something else and not on the purpose of this beautiful explanation regarding how a four-way valve switches to the proper heating or cooling needed by the customer indoor house so don't knock it off with a thumb down I give it a hundred percent thumbs up thank you for this beautiful video thank you HVAC tech do love everything that is teach basically how to understand pictorial electrical pressures compression regarding air conditioner refrigeration or ice makers
Reversing valve heat pumps have been around 60 plus years I have installed them for 42 years and are 31/2 times more efficient than electric strip heat , and 80% of dealers are afraid of a heat pump, payback for the 200-400 dollars more in cost is less than 1 season Straight Electric heat only should be outlawed for being the Blackest energy one can use for heating
Mr. Clint 1st wanna say I'm litterly discover this Video from what I understand this video is very clearity on Revers valve ... correct me during the video it mention ' Pilot(🔥) valve'
*No complicated technical jargon, just simple explanation of how it works; Super easy to understand,* *Thank You! Thank You! Thank You!* | 2 years ago my Carrier single package heat pump PH4Z-060 failed to provide heat. I called an HVAC company to troubleshoot and repair, the technician diagnosed and found the heat strip was burned out and the galvanized housing/box was rusted. The replacement part was unavailable according to the expert. *Long story short, I don't believe that he checked the electromagnetic coil and reversing valve.* My heat pump is 8 years old and I'm considering a Split System to replace it. *'Care to share any advice?*
I wouldn't be where I am today both mentally and in the hvac install trade and continually progressing rapidly in said trade and mental wear withal and know how if it wasn't for your intelligence and generosity of openly teaching the details of the trade 🤗🤗🤗🧠💪👨🎓🧑🔧🕵♂️🤔🤔
Thanks! Installed a Nest Theromostat in my Apt about a year ago almost and I had issues running. Trying to figure out why when i run the AC its pumping out hot air! Little did I know it was not gas powered as I though and was a heat pump! I just though it full on reversed the compressor and didn't realize there is a valve that does that part. Only thing I don't like about it is that 1) since it uses the compressor it is just as expensive to run as the AC and 2) it doesn't get as hot as a gas or electric and takes longer to warm up my apartment and thus costing me more money. Normally my electric bill is 70-100 but its been 130-150 this year for winter.
The old Thermo King MD-II's used to have something similar to this, but it was more of a round cylindrical shape, enabled mechanically by the Hot Gas circuit when calling for defrost or heat. They were fully serviceable, I rebuilt many of them......GLAD IT'S NO LONGER A STANDARD LOL!!!
You show that just after the expansion Device the refrigerant is in a Flash Gas state when really for the system to work efficiently it is in a high pressure liquid state so most of the outdoor coil will actually be filled with liquid. Near the output of the cooling coils will have a liquid flash gas interface. At the input the pressure is high but at the output the pressure is lower and should be all gas. Also heat is going into the Outdoor coil and this is being pumped from the outside to the inside. Latent heat of Evaporation is the real clever part of heat pumps. Heat is going in but temp is not rising,
Amp draw on compressor is much higher on Heat mode vs cooling. I get about 2500 watts to 3000 watts on 3 ton in cooling depending on outdoor temp, but heating is 2900 to 3500 and get outside TXV action after 10 mins run causing a sinusoidal current draw varying about 200 watts in heat mode only if you graph wattage, all normal for my Heil HP 3 ton R22.
Very Excellent video. I am replacing the thermostat on an older Nordyne Heat pump with a newer Sensi "Smart" Thermostat made by Emerson. Based on your video may I assume the reversing valve in this Nordyne unit is energized in the cooling mode? May I assume the "O" terminal (orange wire) goes to the reversing valve? This unit has indoor air handler for supplemental resistance heat or emergency resistance heat. The old thermostat is not programmable and strictly mechanical. It has 2 mercury switches in it for main (compressor) and supplemental (resistance) heat. I am a retired technician. I did some HVAC but that was not my specialty. The new thermostat is programmable and can also be controlled via Wi-Fi or mobile data. Larry Retired Sears Tech Electronics and appliance repair 43 yrs
Back in the early 60s, I had a CARRIER HP PACKAGE Looking like a large window unit at the BRONX ZOO, where the took care of BABY animals, but we did NOT have the instrumation, we now take for granted All you had were service thermomitors So trying to find a bad 3 way valves, was NOT obvious, unless it was REALLY LEAKING between high/low Another thing NEVER HIT A VALVE BODY, as you can do DAMAGE TO IT CREATING THE SAME PROBLEM CAUSED BY THAT VALVE ! Cheers 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸. HAPPY NEW YEAR ALL .
If I only have 4 wires going to my heat pump from Thermostat, couldn't I just put a jumper inside the heat pump so the reversing valve would be energized whenever the AC came on in the winter and run the heat pump in AC mode? In summer disconnect the jumper or put in a toggle switch?
This is very helpful for me to understand how to maintain my own equipment at home. Thank you. I am very interested to know the sequence of events that occurs during a defrost cycle of a heat pump. The compressor receives an intense shock to the system when this valve actuates, and I would like to know if compressors for heat pumps differ from simple air conditioners in a way that compensates for this shock load they receive regularly. Also, I have seen systems that measure pressure differentials between outside and inside the outside unit to determine when to operate defrost cycles rather than simple temperature differentials or timers. Is the efficiency gained by a pressure differential system worth the added expense and complexity?
That hissing noise you heard is called hydraulic hissing. It's just the flow of the fluid you hear through the pipes, same way you hear water flow through water pipes in your home. The expansion valve or any restrictive device which interrupts the flow will cause a noise. Same way if you have roof racks on the roof of a car, you hear a whistling noise because the flow of air is interrupted.
Great video.. one thing that puzzles me - when the system is in heating-mode, the refrigerant lines are used for the opposite purpose of cooling. Since the lines are not the same size ( my suction line is 3/4 and liquid is 5/16), aren't the lines improperly sized upon reversing? Is there a performance loss in heating mode due to the improper sizing.
I would like to add a reversing valve to.a.common refrigerator so that it can heat up as a proofing chamber when needed. As the conpressor on a fridge is not as powerful, will a reversing valve out of a heat pump still work and be able to switch? Or not ..
Thank you for this. Hmm.. I wonder if this could be the problem with my system-- the reversing valve not working properly. Back during winter we turned the heat on but after it warmed up a bit we turned it back to cool mode but it was heating instead. The outside compressor (which was 12yrs old) died. Took a few months to get someone to actually come out and diagnose. We replaced the outside unit with a matching unit designed to work with our inside unit (Trane brand). Had it professionally installed and cooling was working. But now it is set to cooling to 70° but its heating instead (got to 77). I turned it off and things cooled off. I'm hoping its not something wrong with the new unit (although it is under warranty) but maybe its the reversing valve. Where exactly is the reversing valve? Is it inside the internal unit or the outside unit or somewhere in between?
I have a heat pump in my house and it's cost effective to run, but the only thing I don't like about heat pumps in general, is they put twice the wear on the compressor because it runs all year long
This was SUPER helpful, thank you; particularly the info. concerning Rheem & Ruud being manufacturers that "fail to" COOLING MODE. With that said, I have a SANHUA Reversing Valve (from Goodman) that when putting nitrogen through the discharge, appears to FAIL TO COOL. Does anyone know if this is accurate? Much appreciated! :)
Here in Texas, the heat mode is used less. I think I'll set it up for energised for heat and label all the wires so future techs to keep them from pulling their hair out.
Thanks for sharing, great video and illustrations. Understand that the pilot valve does the shift, at what pressure should the refrigerant be when in heat mode? I’m not sure but I don’t think my valve is working properly, I’m not getting to desired temperature inside the house. In heat mode, the line going to the evaporator inside doesn’t feel like it’s getting hot enough to provide enough heat to warm up the house. I put my thermometer on the line going into the air handler, ( in between the insulation and copper line) to get a reading as it leaves the outside unit, the temperature reads around 67 degrees F. The gas should be a much higher temperature going to the air handler right?, so is my revering valve not working right or is there something else I should be looking at? Any advice is much appreciated.
its confusing that the refrigerant is labeled as a flash gas between the metering device and evap coil, in cool mode. because while some of the refrigerant is changed from liquid to vapor after metering device, its still in a saturated state (liquid still present) until it passes fully through the evap coil on a normally operating system. then it absorbs heat, and boils into vapor. right?
Ok I have about a dozen apartments connected to one master/slave unit. How can one apartment be running heat and another be running AC on the same unit?
Do you have any section drawings or diagrams that you can share for a heat pump system in a residential high-rise? i.e. whole package install including drip pan to external drip pipe outlet on the facade of a building?
Hi Bryan how r u! I got questions I do get it hot gas come from discharge through capillary to shift reversing valve but where is suction line gas come from? Because I see the flow in video suction gas is not come from common suction line, low gas flow back to common suction! Where low gas come from? It’s doesn’t look like to from common suction? Thanks
Thanks for clearly explaining how the solenoid works
12 year hvac tech here and this guy sure does know what he's talking about 👍
Vrey good shering gues
After buying my first home back in August, these videos help. Google has also been a big help to assure me it's working properly. I panicked the other day when I heard the valve switch when it went into defrost mode. When I went outside, the compressor was running, but not the fan. Of course the worst thing popped into my head, like great it's broke. Then after some researching, I was reassured it was working as it should. So much to learn about these heat pumps.
Phillip you missed the entertaining part of the defrost cycle. When it ends, the outdoor fan comes back on and since the coil was heated, it will blow a big cloud of water vapor (depending on conditions) which looks like a big cloud of smoke.
I'm new to the hvac world and I understood that if it was blowing hot/warm air out of the outdoor unit it was making it cold inside and vice versa but this video connected so many things I thought I understood
I appreciate your efforts to explain reversing valve function in detail
This is so elegant in it's simplicity, I am glad I was curious as to how it worked. Also I am surprised these haven't been implemented absolutely everywhere 20 years ago.
Thanks for the valve overview - you really provide a valuable service for the industry. Just one thing that would be helpful be is if you go over the failure modes of a reversing valve. From your overview, it seems pretty bullet proof.
Coil engerzied het pump systom seftey dves good thanlyoi gues rebersing valved is full ok
I have seen only two failures. One is when the sliding piston gets stuck and then it will only run in one mode. Not so bad if you're calling for heat and the reversing valve is stuck in the heating position but then it is really bad when you have a call down the line for cooling on a hot day and the unit is putting out hot air. The second one is much more difficult to diagnose for someone who does not have a good understanding of a refrigerant cycle. I have seen reversing valves leak internally, and what happens is a large part of the hot gas from the compressor discharge leaks in the reversing valve directly into the suction line of the compressor. It will sort of equalize the system pressure and resemble conditions of bad compressor valves but by taking superheat, subcooling and measuring temperatures of all the lines in and out of the reversing valve you can differentiate between the two conditions.
Revrsing blockinn dreact fixing
@@Howie875 wow how long you been doing Hvac?
@@lilkenny123123 Hi Kenneth. I am recently retired but I worked as an HVAC tech for about 40 years. I worked in some high-volume shops and after a while you basically see just about every problem you could imagine.
This is great. Thanks for clearly explaining this so well and providing the visuals to go with it. Helps alot in understanding how a heat pump systems works.
These animations are so fascinating.
These animations are so valuable, thanks Brian, I am sharing with my fellow techs.
What a soothing reassuring voice!
Just saw one changed out today. Cool to see how it works.
Thank you so much for this video. I work for AC manufacturer and always been interested in stuff like that. Years of study but only practice verifies knowledge and videos like yours are very helpful to imagine and understand operation of the individual parts. I discovered you by reversing valve ;) I subscribed your channel and want to wish you all the best :)
Thanks for the tips, there's always something to be learned , that's why this trade is cooler than rocket science
I really learn a lot from your videos. Thanks 👍
50 dislikes? Must be plumbers..
Or Failed hvac techs
Do not worry. This is an excelent video.
😆 word.
Most definitely plumbers hate vibes, this was a thorough explanation.
Or painters
That was a very simple explanation. Thank you
Those who thumbs down this video should not be a air conditioner or refrigeration tech please you need to get a job what fits you as a tech on something else and not on the purpose of this beautiful explanation regarding how a four-way valve switches to the proper heating or cooling needed by the customer indoor house so don't knock it off with a thumb down I give it a hundred percent thumbs up thank you for this beautiful video thank you HVAC tech do love everything that is teach basically how to understand pictorial electrical pressures compression regarding air conditioner refrigeration or ice makers
Reversing valve heat pumps have been around 60 plus years I have installed them for 42 years and are 31/2 times more efficient than electric strip heat , and 80% of dealers are afraid of a heat pump, payback for the 200-400 dollars more in cost is less than 1 season
Straight Electric heat only should be outlawed for being the Blackest energy one can use for heating
Mr. Clint 1st wanna say I'm litterly discover this Video from what I understand this video is very clearity on Revers valve ... correct me during the video it mention ' Pilot(🔥) valve'
Could you tell me how to turn off my AUX HEAT on my water heat pump Please
Wow, what an excellent description.
*No complicated technical jargon, just simple explanation of how it works; Super easy to understand,* *Thank You! Thank You! Thank You!* | 2 years ago my Carrier single package heat pump PH4Z-060 failed to provide heat. I called an HVAC company to troubleshoot and repair, the technician diagnosed and found the heat strip was burned out and the galvanized housing/box was rusted. The replacement part was unavailable according to the expert. *Long story short, I don't believe that he checked the electromagnetic coil and reversing valve.* My heat pump is 8 years old and I'm considering a Split System to replace it. *'Care to share any advice?*
GOOD JOB BRAIN. I LOVE YOUR VIDEOS. THEY ARE VERY EDUCATIONAL AND A GOOD REMINDER TOO. PLEASE KEEP THEM COMING.
best reversing valve demonstration that exists
"."
Thank you so much sir,this one is pretty cool,god bless and have a great new year
I wouldn't be where I am today both mentally and in the hvac install trade and continually progressing rapidly in said trade and mental wear withal and know how if it wasn't for your intelligence and generosity of openly teaching the details of the trade 🤗🤗🤗🧠💪👨🎓🧑🔧🕵♂️🤔🤔
Thanks! Installed a Nest Theromostat in my Apt about a year ago almost and I had issues running. Trying to figure out why when i run the AC its pumping out hot air! Little did I know it was not gas powered as I though and was a heat pump! I just though it full on reversed the compressor and didn't realize there is a valve that does that part. Only thing I don't like about it is that 1) since it uses the compressor it is just as expensive to run as the AC and 2) it doesn't get as hot as a gas or electric and takes longer to warm up my apartment and thus costing me more money. Normally my electric bill is 70-100 but its been 130-150 this year for winter.
Thanks for sharing this video. It was very clearly explaining and very useful. Great job
This is awesome.
Been awaiting long for such type of teaching with animation.
Keep up the good work
Extremely well worded and presented.
Thank you so much sir
I love This channel ❤️
The old Thermo King MD-II's used to have something similar to this, but it was more of a round cylindrical shape, enabled mechanically by the Hot Gas circuit when calling for defrost or heat. They were fully serviceable, I rebuilt many of them......GLAD IT'S NO LONGER A STANDARD LOL!!!
Hot gas bypass...
thanks for clear presentation of the functioning
Excellent, great content and animation.
Very well said. You are so on point!
Best representation I've seen yet
You show that just after the expansion Device the refrigerant is in a Flash Gas state when really for the system to work efficiently it is in a high pressure liquid state so most of the outdoor coil will actually be filled with liquid. Near the output of the cooling coils will have a liquid flash gas interface. At the input the pressure is high but at the output the pressure is lower and should be all gas. Also heat is going into the Outdoor coil and this is being pumped from the outside to the inside. Latent heat of Evaporation is the real clever part of heat pumps. Heat is going in but temp is not rising,
Great video, can you do one on replacing the reversing valve?
Amp draw on compressor is much higher on Heat mode vs cooling. I get about 2500 watts to 3000 watts on 3 ton in cooling depending on outdoor temp, but heating is 2900 to 3500 and get outside TXV action after 10 mins run causing a sinusoidal current draw varying about 200 watts in heat mode only if you graph wattage, all normal for my Heil HP 3 ton R22.
Het revals valve not working stome runing need pleas explain any sloushion fee pleas..
@@jollyscaria1922 Don't follow you??
@@jollyscaria1922 it was well done. Very simple to grasp thanks a lot
Im so glad I watched this video, thanks for explaining!
Thank u Jesus of HVAC 🙏🏿 for showing us da way
How do u feel about the hook for brazing?
Clearly understood and thanks
I love your way of Teaching..
Very Excellent video. I am replacing the thermostat on an older Nordyne Heat pump with a newer Sensi "Smart" Thermostat made by Emerson. Based on your video may I assume the reversing valve in this Nordyne unit is energized in the cooling mode? May I assume the "O" terminal (orange wire) goes to the reversing valve? This unit has indoor air handler for supplemental resistance heat or emergency resistance heat. The old thermostat is not programmable and strictly mechanical. It has 2 mercury switches in it for main (compressor) and supplemental (resistance) heat. I am a retired technician. I did some HVAC but that was not my specialty. The new thermostat is programmable and can also be controlled via Wi-Fi or mobile data.
Larry Retired Sears Tech Electronics and appliance repair 43 yrs
Back in the early 60s, I had a CARRIER HP PACKAGE Looking like a large window unit at the BRONX ZOO, where the took care of BABY animals, but we did NOT have the instrumation, we now take for granted All you had were service thermomitors So trying to find a bad 3 way valves, was NOT obvious, unless it was REALLY LEAKING between high/low Another thing NEVER HIT A VALVE BODY, as you can do DAMAGE TO IT CREATING THE SAME PROBLEM CAUSED BY THAT VALVE ! Cheers 🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸🇺🇸. HAPPY NEW YEAR ALL .
HVAC School, Thank you very much
If I only have 4 wires going to my heat pump from Thermostat, couldn't I just put a jumper inside the heat pump so the reversing valve would be energized whenever the AC came on in the winter and run the heat pump in AC mode? In summer disconnect the jumper or put in a toggle switch?
Excellent illustrations
This is very helpful for me to understand how to maintain my own equipment at home. Thank you. I am very interested to know the sequence of events that occurs during a defrost cycle of a heat pump. The compressor receives an intense shock to the system when this valve actuates, and I would like to know if compressors for heat pumps differ from simple air conditioners in a way that compensates for this shock load they receive regularly. Also, I have seen systems that measure pressure differentials between outside and inside the outside unit to determine when to operate defrost cycles rather than simple temperature differentials or timers. Is the efficiency gained by a pressure differential system worth the added expense and complexity?
Good sharing waiting next video
How to know the this valve its energized when cooling or heating?.i appreciate your answer.great channel by the way
Thank you for this overview video.
Awesome video!! Why does it hiss when it switches over?? I know it's reliving pressure but you explain it do we'll.
It only hiss wen da AC getz turn on
That hissing noise you heard is called hydraulic hissing. It's just the flow of the fluid you hear through the pipes, same way you hear water flow through water pipes in your home. The expansion valve or any restrictive device which interrupts the flow will cause a noise. Same way if you have roof racks on the roof of a car, you hear a whistling noise because the flow of air is interrupted.
Outstanding as usual!!
Thanks for your video
Great video.. one thing that puzzles me - when the system is in heating-mode, the refrigerant lines are used for the opposite purpose of cooling. Since the lines are not the same size ( my suction line is 3/4 and liquid is 5/16), aren't the lines improperly sized upon reversing? Is there a performance loss in heating mode due to the improper sizing.
I would like to add a reversing valve to.a.common refrigerator so that it can heat up as a proofing chamber when needed. As the conpressor on a fridge is not as powerful, will a reversing valve out of a heat pump still work and be able to switch? Or not ..
Wow that makes much more sense. Thanks!
Thank you for this.
Hmm.. I wonder if this could be the problem with my system-- the reversing valve not working properly. Back during winter we turned the heat on but after it warmed up a bit we turned it back to cool mode but it was heating instead. The outside compressor (which was 12yrs old) died. Took a few months to get someone to actually come out and diagnose. We replaced the outside unit with a matching unit designed to work with our inside unit (Trane brand). Had it professionally installed and cooling was working. But now it is set to cooling to 70° but its heating instead (got to 77). I turned it off and things cooled off. I'm hoping its not something wrong with the new unit (although it is under warranty) but maybe its the reversing valve. Where exactly is the reversing valve? Is it inside the internal unit or the outside unit or somewhere in between?
Just finished a module explaining this reverse valve
Great explanation, thank you!
Great video. Thanks
When the cooling demand is met in a HP, does it first turn the compressor off or the reversing valve (assuming reversing valve energized is cooling)?
My Mitsu 3-zone has both a reversing valve and a "2-way" valve. Any idea what the latter does?
Thanks
Very good explanation.
Ruud, Rheem, Gree Flexx, MrCool Universal, ACPro X Series
Sir please tell me explain me check valve for split clima. I dont know how it working
I have a heat pump in my house and it's cost effective to run, but the only thing I don't like about heat pumps in general, is they put twice the wear on the compressor because it runs all year long
This was SUPER helpful, thank you; particularly the info. concerning Rheem & Ruud being manufacturers that "fail to" COOLING MODE.
With that said, I have a SANHUA Reversing Valve (from Goodman) that when putting nitrogen through the discharge, appears to FAIL TO COOL.
Does anyone know if this is accurate?
Much appreciated! :)
You are a great person
Here in Texas, the heat mode is used less. I think I'll set it up for energised for heat and label all the wires so future techs to keep them from pulling their hair out.
Good illustrations
Well done, do you have any videos of water to water ground source heat pumps?
Thank you we have heat pumps at my job 416 units not all of this until but the 4 bedroom apartment does.
Thanks for sharing, great video and illustrations.
Understand that the pilot valve does the shift, at what pressure should the refrigerant be when in heat mode? I’m not sure but I don’t think my valve is working properly, I’m not getting to desired temperature inside the house.
In heat mode, the line going to the evaporator inside doesn’t feel like it’s getting hot enough to provide enough heat to warm up the house.
I put my thermometer on the line going into the air handler, ( in between the insulation and copper line) to get a reading as it leaves the outside unit, the temperature reads around 67 degrees F. The gas should be a much higher temperature going to the air handler right?, so is my revering valve not working right or is there something else I should be looking at?
Any advice is much appreciated.
Great video! What is the evaporators refrigerant maximum temperature heating mode?
Thank you for your efforts
Very educative, thank you.
Make a video on All HVAC tools a Technican and site engineer must have.
its confusing that the refrigerant is labeled as a flash gas between the metering device and evap coil, in cool mode. because while some of the refrigerant is changed from liquid to vapor after metering device, its still in a saturated state (liquid still present) until it passes fully through the evap coil on a normally operating system. then it absorbs heat, and boils into vapor. right?
Could you also use a reversing valve to send refrigerant to a heat exchanger to dump heat into a pool vs the condenser?
Awesome and informative !
Outstanding. Thanks!
very good training on here many thanks
How is a heat pump
Hooked up to a thermostat ? What wires specifically for both cooling & heating ?
Interesting, thank you
Amazing video!
Nice brother
Thanks
Thks:
?How much more is a heat pump more than an air conditioner?
?Should I always just get a heat pump over an air conditioner?
nicely done thank you
Ok I have about a dozen apartments connected to one master/slave unit. How can one apartment be running heat and another be running AC on the same unit?
Do you have any section drawings or diagrams that you can share for a heat pump system in a residential high-rise? i.e. whole package install including drip pan to external drip pipe outlet on the facade of a building?
So when you’re charging to the liquid line, How do you know when it’s the liquid or suction?
4:33 does all the heat come from outside? How much comes from compressing the gas? If any?
Good job
Great video. Thank you!
Who is the other manufacturer that uses the B terminal?… Test question.
Rheem and rudd use the b terminal.
Thank you for sharing
Hi Bryan how r u! I got questions I do get it hot gas come from discharge through capillary to shift reversing valve but where is suction line gas come from? Because I see the flow in video suction gas is not come from common suction line, low gas flow back to common suction! Where low gas come from? It’s doesn’t look like to from common suction? Thanks