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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Chiller Talk for the Chillerphobic

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Training, Careers, Airconditioning, Self-improvement, Hvac, Business, Education, Refrigeration, Heating, Ac, Apprenticeship

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 27 January 2017

⏱️ 50 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, we talk with Jeff Nieman about chillers and how they work.

For those of you who primarily work in residential or light commercial HVAC, chillers may be unfamiliar at best and terrifying at worst. However, centrifugal chillers' parts are actually quite similar to those of HVAC units. They have an evaporator, compressor, condenser, metering device, and control system, just like the HVAC units we see every day. Jeff believes that breaking a chiller down into its parts is the easiest way to become comfortable with it.

Chillers are used for comfort cooling and process cooling. In comfort cooling, chillers discharge cool water (44°F) to the building. From there, air blows over the water to cool the space. For process cooling, chilled water flows through machines that require constant cooling to operate correctly, such as laser-cutting machines and MRIs. As you can see, chillers simply absorb and reject heat, just like standard compression-refrigeration HVAC systems. However, unlike traditional compression-refrigeration units, chillers have an independent oil circuit.

Preventive maintenance is a major part of chiller work. You can tell a lot by listening to a chiller and looking for oil or water on it. You also check superheat, subcooling, and water temperatures. Service calls also require technicians to engage their senses. Most issues deal with low water flow, building issues, and dirty strainers in the condenser water piping.

Bryan and Jeff also discuss:

  • Two-way and three-way valves
  • Glycol and freeze protection
  • Alarms (float switch, low evaporator pressure, high condenser pressure)
  • Chiller troubleshooting
  • Impellers and inlet guide vanes
  • Suction in negative pressure
  • Fan coils
  • Chiller water
  • Screw chillers

Also, Bert and the Testo 770-3 make an appearance.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This episode of the HVAC School podcast is brought to you by Testo Instruments and Carrier.

0:09.0

And something about Carrier that I want to mention is they kind of led the industry recently.

0:13.2

When I say recently, this has been a couple years back, but this is something that a lot of

0:16.4

technicians have spoken about.

0:18.0

And so you may or may not know about this.

0:19.5

If you don't, you should know about it.

0:21.5

And if you do know about it, then I'm going to at least give you a little bit more detail.

0:25.3

There was a bulletin that carrier put out and it was D.S.B.

0:28.9

1-4-0012 and what that what that bulletin says is basically that in some of their small ton splits

0:36.1

specific model specific serial numbers they had compressors in them that came

0:41.0

shipped with an additive a a rust inhibitor additive, that carrier

0:44.7

wasn't aware was in the compressors. I mean it's no secret that a lot of the

0:49.4

components are purchased from other parties and then put into these units.

0:52.3

Well this particular compressor came

0:55.0

shipped with a rust inhibitor, and that rust inhibitor

0:57.2

was getting into the expansion valves

0:58.9

and causing them to stick.

1:00.8

But what's really interesting is that carrier came out and basically said, look, you can warranty an additive and this additive will fix the problem.

1:08.0

And it's the first time I've seen a manufacturer recommend an additive.

1:13.6

And maybe there's other cases that I'm just not aware of,

1:15.8

but they essentially said, look,

1:17.2

add this particular model number,

...

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