4.8 • 985 Ratings
🗓️ 28 December 2016
⏱️ 31 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this unedited episode of HVAC School, Bryan and Nathan talk about some basic rules for circuit board diagnosis.
So, circuit boards are boards with circuits in them. They come in two types. The traditional printed variety contains switches, relays, and resistors. The other type contains silicon chips and uses logic and processing inside the boards. You may notice these in some high-end commercial systems (EMS), but we rarely see them in residential HVAC.
The diagnostic challenges come in when technicians are unfamiliar with what's on the circuit board. It helps to break it down and look at one thing at a time. Yes, there are lots of wires and relays. You may not know what it does. Take your time and get to know where everything goes and what the components are doing. Techs often misdiagnose boards because they simply don't understand how it works, and many of them don't make the effort to understand it.
It may help to look at the overall purpose of the board. For example, a defrost control simply initiates and terminates defrost. It controls the condenser fan, reversing valve, and heat strips, all of which have a function in the defrost process.
If you have a short on the board (no-load path), you will see arcing somewhere. You would most likely see melting on the board if that were the case.
If you have a board that has failed open, the switches are closed, and there is an input. However, the board doesn't travel through the time delay to bring on the contactor.
Bryan and Nathan also cover:
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0:00.0 | This episode on the HVAC School Podcast is sponsored by HVAC-HAC |
0:09.4 | HAC.com. Don't be a hack. |
0:15.0 | All right, when you say a hack. |
0:27.7 | All right, welcome to, when you I mean, like what am I actually welcoming people to here? Welcoming to turning on your phone and queuing up this podcast. |
0:30.9 | Welcome to hitting a button on your phone and plugging it into your car stereo. |
0:36.1 | You're welcome that we made this boring thing. |
0:38.2 | Unless you have Bluetooth and then that made it a little easier. |
0:41.0 | Today on the HVAC school podcast it's me and Nathan. |
0:44.6 | Hello. That's Nathan and I'm going to do this. This is the first time in my entire |
0:49.6 | podcasting career. We call it a career. |
0:54.0 | In my, and any podcast I've ever produced, I've always edited. |
0:57.0 | And this will be the first podcast in which I'm not going to edit one bit. |
1:01.0 | So you'll hear all my cursing. |
1:02.0 | So if Nathan goes off on a curse banter stream I'm just |
1:06.1 | going to leave it in so that you know the authenticity. Now that's not going to happen. There's |
1:09.4 | going to be no cursing here. Future sponsors of the HVAC School Podcast. |
1:14.0 | Anyway, today on the podcast, we're going to talk about circuit boards. |
1:18.0 | I had a email from a technician who said that he struggles with diagnosing circuit boards and he wanted my input on that. |
1:25.4 | Of course this is a very general topic and so we're going to talk about it generally because |
1:30.0 | there's a lot of different types of circuit boards but there are some there are some broad things that we can that we can discuss |
1:37.0 | so we're gonna just jump on right in with both feet. Yep and our heads |
1:46.0 | first off, what is a circuit board? Just kidding. |
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