I thought this was a very good video, especially for any one who is thinking about choosing this as a career, it just shows how much variety that a HVAC/R has to know and do. I have watched a lot of your videos, you really don’t say to much but these videos are very unique and good👍
You should always build the ceiling panels as you build the walls to insure your walls are square as you go. Set up your walls until you can put up a ceiling panel. Then another wall or two until you can put up the next ceiling panel. In my experience this lets you know quickly if all your lines and measurements are correct. It sucks to get the last corner panel and struggle to get it in ;)
Guy needs to slow down with the torch when he's brazing in the suction trap. If you use the heat a little more and heat the fitting and pipe until they are warm enough you can draw back the torch and slowly lay solder. You should be able to get much more penetration and lay a nicer cap when you are finished. You won't get the solder and joint too hot and burn red this way. You don't want to cool this braze with wet rags whenever possible. There is a slight chance you will crack the weld, although i have yet to experience this.
While your piping practices will probably work. Your suction rise is a like a 38* angle. You never want a suction rise to be anything but straight up. The reason behind this is your oil return. At that angle refrigerant oil collects on the lower section of the pipe and can drip back down the line. I see you welded a 90 on the outside of the wall. I just don't understand why you couldn't hard pipe the rest inside? Was there something in the way? Another thing, we never want to reheat a fitting twice. When you weld a fitting it anneals the fitting therefore changing its chemical structure. When you burn one side of the fitting in without the other side the diameter and hardness change. This will make your next weld not quite as good as the other. This may never cause you a problem, but it could. By the way, up joints are very difficult so wouldn't you want the heat that you already used on the other joint in the fitting to help you braze that up joint? Less acetylene might save you a few $.
Man, the manufacturer says the you want the condensing unit atleast 1/2 width of the coil away from the wall. I hope you don't have high ambient temps where your at.
It looks like in the video that you have to liquid line touching those galvanized clamps on the exterior wall. Although you have tape between them eventually the vibration of refrigerant flow will allow them to touch. In the event of dissimilar metals electrolysis will occur between those metals. Chances are the softer metal will lose, this will eventually cause a refrigerant leak.
Any ideas why people don't run the electrical on the outside to keep it neater? Each light should have a run to the roof side and run the tubing on the outside??
We receive 2x 20' of bunkers, 32' of dairy, 8' meat, 8' produce, 4 glass doors, 2 large wic's and 1 small one. Then build a wic and wif 16x18x10' high. a small wic 10x10x10'. 4 guys in day 1.
Good work guys. How long did it take you to set the whole box? You guys say 2 days, but it seems like it took longer. And the whole installation, including the whole thing, how long did it take you?
I would say one day total on the box. We had to start in afternoon assembling it due to late delivery. Electrical and refrigeration took us 1.5 days. Would put It at 30 hrs total.
We are servicing all our equipment that we install. Walk in works great, never had any issues for past 3 years, had to replace door closer few months back, thats pretty much it.
@@briansmith6135 You can flush all oxidation before you solder your lines to the condenser, dont see anything wrong with that, never had problems. Just to let you know.
We usually ask customers what they store, do they care for more durable material, what temps they plan to keep product at, this walk in has slightly bigger door (customer ask for pallets to fit thru), how bright they want it to be inside. There are most of manufactures build very similar panels every manufacture has an options like digital thermometers, different hinges, glass windows, stainless still panels, in some cases we have to install floors (ramp/no ramp). We collect all information from customer what they want and give them options. I did see couple times very weird boxes that customers ordered themselves, unfortunately those didn’t meet our state codes, so we declined the job(customers get frustrated). Suggestions - check your state code. Here in California freezer has to have min 4” thick panels, coolers 3.5” thick, 2” gap from any wall, all that has to be considered. Also hire good installers, we see sometimes good boxes 2-3 years old that start to grow mold and start to sweat due to not proper installation or/and not proper refrigeration equipment.
@@user-up2eg2ed4e Im not sure. Need to get quotes from suppliers on the equipment and box, every time we get across those jobs. Those jobs quoted per request. We don't follow prices our selves all the time on equipment because its very big variety of different applications (so are prices on equipment), so all of those jobs priced differently depend on each job and difficulty of installation.
Just a regular walk in coolers panels. They build by code to CA standards. At that time when we build this one was 3.5" thickness of the panels for coolers 4" for Freezers, I believe it still the same here in Cali
oh man... just. Read the book next time when it comes to clearances to airflow obstructions with the condensing unit. Other than that this is a top of the line install.
@@MaratRPMSoCal Do you remember the Dimension sizes on this walk in box? Also with the price you said did that include labor or without. I am trying to get an 8x10 Walk in and trying to get a good quote want to know what is should be around.
@@runescapejr I think just the box was around 10K. size 12X14(might be wrong but around there). But that door is not standard size (pallet size 48"), there is many options on the box you can add up, so prices will vary. Prices on whole project will also depend on what area of US you are - labor is different state to state. Best thing to do is to get couple quotes, but be careful, some low bids might cost you more in future, research on good companies in your area and get couple bids.
@@runescapejr I love this! Can I please have your contact information because I am currently looking for something similar but to be shipped to the Caribean. Please send me an email so we can talk I think you can be very useful in so many ways. Jacquy.dieujuste@gmail.com Thank you!
Jeff Okuna I worked with a guy that has 15+ years of experience and my father has 20+ years of experience and both told me still guns aren’t made for it yeah you can use it once or twice for an emergency when you don’t a roder hammer
@@Jason-wc3fh no telling truth been doing for bootz mfg for 24 years in az that is a 5 hour job we actually manufacture walk INS travel country and do complete installs and do all service work not too many like us
@@garym2293 you pour a cement pad outside for the condenser and put together an entire walk in cooler from the ground up, do all the electrical and refrigeration, drain, brazing, caulking, purging, testing, startup, insulating, caulking, etc... in 5 hours??? Hahahahahahaha!
yes but pad is usually there most units sit on a the roof sorry its the truth people all over the country know us bootz boys we are bad ass sorry but telling truth and only 4 of us on installs
omg with the rap crap that they think is music.... no talent they can't even play a instrument to save their lives think travis scott .... stop the madness
Great video, especially for educational purposes. Clean install fellas!!!
I thought this was a very good video, especially for any one who is thinking about choosing this as a career, it just shows how much variety that a HVAC/R has to know and do. I have watched a lot of your videos, you really don’t say to much but these videos are very unique and good👍
HVAC is a great trade no doubt
New subscribed from Somalia 🇸🇴
Thank you !
Great job it looks amazing
Thank you!
Nice job Marat
You should always build the ceiling panels as you build the walls to insure your walls are square as you go. Set up your walls until you can put up a ceiling panel. Then another wall or two until you can put up the next ceiling panel. In my experience this lets you know quickly if all your lines and measurements are correct. It sucks to get the last corner panel and struggle to get it in ;)
Guy needs to slow down with the torch when he's brazing in the suction trap. If you use the heat a little more and heat the fitting and pipe until they are warm enough you can draw back the torch and slowly lay solder. You should be able to get much more penetration and lay a nicer cap when you are finished. You won't get the solder and joint too hot and burn red this way. You don't want to cool this braze with wet rags whenever possible. There is a slight chance you will crack the weld, although i have yet to experience this.
While your piping practices will probably work. Your suction rise is a like a 38* angle. You never want a suction rise to be anything but straight up. The reason behind this is your oil return. At that angle refrigerant oil collects on the lower section of the pipe and can drip back down the line. I see you welded a 90 on the outside of the wall. I just don't understand why you couldn't hard pipe the rest inside? Was there something in the way? Another thing, we never want to reheat a fitting twice. When you weld a fitting it anneals the fitting therefore changing its chemical structure. When you burn one side of the fitting in without the other side the diameter and hardness change. This will make your next weld not quite as good as the other. This may never cause you a problem, but it could. By the way, up joints are very difficult so wouldn't you want the heat that you already used on the other joint in the fitting to help you braze that up joint? Less acetylene might save you a few $.
Man, the manufacturer says the you want the condensing unit atleast 1/2 width of the coil away from the wall. I hope you don't have high ambient temps where your at.
It looks like in the video that you have to liquid line touching those galvanized clamps on the exterior wall. Although you have tape between them eventually the vibration of refrigerant flow will allow them to touch. In the event of dissimilar metals electrolysis will occur between those metals. Chances are the softer metal will lose, this will eventually cause a refrigerant leak.
Fuckin drain line looked boss inside the cooler
Any ideas why people don't run the electrical on the outside to keep it neater? Each light should have a run to the roof side and run the tubing on the outside??
I think when there is not much room on top of walk in its way easier to run inside the box. Some people make those runs really clean looking ✊
Good video, but you are brazing and not purging with Nitrogen. No bueno.
NICE installation ! Some day I'll get to do installation walk in box. Thank you for sharing this video with us.
High quality work, sir.
Thank You sir!
We receive 2x 20' of bunkers, 32' of dairy, 8' meat, 8' produce, 4 glass doors, 2 large wic's and 1 small one. Then build a wic and wif 16x18x10' high. a small wic 10x10x10'. 4 guys in day 1.
You guys rock👍✊
You don't run nitrogen through the Lineset when soldering?
Good work guys. How long did it take you to set the whole box? You guys say 2 days, but it seems like it took longer. And the whole installation, including the whole thing, how long did it take you?
I would say one day total on the box. We had to start in afternoon assembling it due to late delivery. Electrical and refrigeration took us 1.5 days. Would put It at 30 hrs total.
I wonder how long that unit worked with all that copper oxide trapped in the system?
I was wondering that too.
We are servicing all our equipment that we install. Walk in works great, never had any issues for past 3 years, had to replace door closer few months back, thats pretty much it.
Yep didn't see any nitrogen being used during the welding.
@@briansmith6135 You can flush all oxidation before you solder your lines to the condenser, dont see anything wrong with that, never had problems. Just to let you know.
@@MaratRPMSoCal we didn't see that happen in that video?
Great job, a lot of work.
Thank You John
Yes, we are very busy still
Dope! I miss the little boxes. I do big (65,000 ft^3) boxes, I miss the little ones a 2 man crew can tackle in a day!
We stuck with smaller once)
it's a good job marat
Thank You sir!
nice job...
Safety glasses my brother your eyes are as good as your arms.
Thats very true - safety should be #1 priority
I only say that for the new guys out there that are watching your video .But great job .
@@franciscoramos9447 I totally agree. I not the best at safety, but it should be #1
nice job i like it
Can't believe The Guys were doing all the soldiering with no nitrogen purge? Wounder why thing go bad?
no kidding.
As a customer whats the most important questions to ask before I install a walk in cooler as far as the brand or marerial?
We usually ask customers what they store, do they care for more durable material, what temps they plan to keep product at, this walk in has slightly bigger door (customer ask for pallets to fit thru), how bright they want it to be inside. There are most of manufactures build very similar panels every manufacture has an options like digital thermometers, different hinges, glass windows, stainless still panels, in some cases we have to install floors (ramp/no ramp). We collect all information from customer what they want and give them options. I did see couple times very weird boxes that customers ordered themselves, unfortunately those didn’t meet our state codes, so we declined the job(customers get frustrated). Suggestions - check your state code. Here in California freezer has to have min 4” thick panels, coolers 3.5” thick, 2” gap from any wall, all that has to be considered. Also hire good installers, we see sometimes good boxes 2-3 years old that start to grow mold and start to sweat due to not proper installation or/and not proper refrigeration equipment.
Goood video...
Thanks!
Very good
Круто Марат, удачи!
Спасибо! Успехов и тебе✊
How much does this setup cost ?
It was done long time ago, prices changed a lot since then
How much would that set up cost today
@@user-up2eg2ed4e Im not sure. Need to get quotes from suppliers on the equipment and box, every time we get across those jobs. Those jobs quoted per request. We don't follow prices our selves all the time on equipment because its very big variety of different applications (so are prices on equipment), so all of those jobs priced differently depend on each job and difficulty of installation.
@@user-up2eg2ed4e that exact job today labor wise we would do for 6-7K
Hello! What is the size of this walk in freezer/cooler please?
unfortunately I don't remember exact size. I want to say 14X10X8.
Concrete floor? Insulation?
You got it! 👍
What are these freezer walls or set up called
Just a regular walk in coolers panels. They build by code to CA standards. At that time when we build this one was 3.5" thickness of the panels for coolers 4" for Freezers, I believe it still the same here in Cali
what silicone or sealer do you use for joining sheet to sheet? thank you
I believe it was rubbaseseal by kason. It comes with the panels usually.
Perfect
Gracias por compartir 👍👍👍👍👍
oh man... just. Read the book next time when it comes to clearances to airflow obstructions with the condensing unit. Other than that this is a top of the line install.
I did research on clearance and unfortunately this is the most we could get. This side of the building always in shade, should be fine.
is it the same instoletion with wallkin freezer
It is
Yes, just add floors to it
What did you use to hang evaporator? 3/8 screws?
3/8" all thread
how many hp is that?
I don't remember. Was long time ago.
song name?
прикольно используешь труборез для поддержки армафлекса!
Я думал что все так делают))
What's the price tag we looking at?
I don't recall. Around 10K, probably slightly over.
@@MaratRPMSoCal Do you remember the Dimension sizes on this walk in box? Also with the price you said did that include labor or without. I am trying to get an 8x10 Walk in and trying to get a good quote want to know what is should be around.
@@runescapejr I think just the box was around 10K. size 12X14(might be wrong but around there). But that door is not standard size (pallet size 48"), there is many options on the box you can add up, so prices will vary. Prices on whole project will also depend on what area of US you are - labor is different state to state. Best thing to do is to get couple quotes, but be careful, some low bids might cost you more in future, research on good companies in your area and get couple bids.
@@runescapejr I love this! Can I please have your contact information because I am currently looking for something similar but to be shipped to the Caribean. Please send me an email so we can talk I think you can be very useful in so many ways. Jacquy.dieujuste@gmail.com
Thank you!
@@MaratRPMSoCal for labor only or all in price?
Does Full 2 days = 16 hour job?
It took longer than that. If I remember right that was 14-15 hrs each day. Also took couple hours to prep a day before install
How do i hire?
we are not looking to hire at the moment
@@MaratRPMSoCal how do i book services?
Were YO! NITRO at Bro..
до скольки работали?
4 часа в день доставки, второй день с 6 до 6, третий с 6 до 21.00
I watch both videos I never See you guys use nitrogen
On system installs we use nitro and rx11 when most of the joints are done. Clears these pipes and all oxidation very good.
Brazing without nitrogen purge...
Purged it after all with RX11
Good video but the first person angles are nauseating.
Thank you Jim. I agree, not the best video out there on UA-cam. I tried my best.
I want working with you
Bad camera job, no explanation, but thanks for sharing.
Sorry to hear that
How to mess up your drill 101 28:33
Drill is fine, drill bit might be a toast ))
I don recall
Jorge, it’s called a hammer drill. Meant to sound and work like that.
Jorge, not sure what you mean, hammer drill with masonry bit for anchors looks legit bro.
Jeff Okuna I worked with a guy that has 15+ years of experience and my father has 20+ years of experience and both told me still guns aren’t made for it yeah you can use it once or twice for an emergency when you don’t a roder hammer
sad thats like a 5 hour job no more than that 2 full days my o my
5 hour job eh? Can't really tell if you're trying to be sarcastic or what.
@@Jason-wc3fh no telling truth been doing for bootz mfg for 24 years in az that is a 5 hour job we actually manufacture walk INS travel country and do complete installs and do all service work not too many like us
@@garym2293 you pour a cement pad outside for the condenser and put together an entire walk in cooler from the ground up, do all the electrical and refrigeration, drain, brazing, caulking, purging, testing, startup, insulating, caulking, etc... in 5 hours??? Hahahahahahaha!
yes but pad is usually there most units sit on a the roof sorry its the truth people all over the country know us bootz boys we are bad ass sorry but telling truth and only 4 of us on installs
Muibuenbideo
omg with the rap crap that they think is music.... no talent they can't even play a instrument to save their lives think travis scott .... stop the madness