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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Freezing Evaporator Fun Facts & Frippery

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 26 November 2020

⏱️ 29 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode, Bryan and Sam discuss freezing evaporator coils. They explain why frozen coils happen and how to address them.

When the coil's surface temperature drops below freezing (32 degrees), the moisture in the air that condenses on the coil can freeze to the coil. In those situations, your suction saturation will probably be in the mid to high twenties.

Generally, freezing evaporators will occur when you have less load on the evaporator. When there is less heat, the evaporator temperature will drop accordingly. The return air temperature is usually around 35 degrees, though that number can fluctuate on older equipment or on systems with dirty coils. Freeze-ups usually happen due to poor airflow or low refrigerant charge, though low refrigerant is usually less severe than airflow or compound airflow-charge problems. Conditions that cause low mass flow can lead to freeze-ups.

When you approach a frozen coil, the first thing you want to do is defrost the coil completely. Then, you will want to check airflow (filter, blower wheel, and coil cleanliness) and then refrigerant restrictions and charge. You'll especially want to make sure you check the liquid line for temperature drops and ensure its temperature is warmer than the outdoor ambient temperature. In addition, static pressure is a valuable reading for determining airflow.

Drain lines can also freeze, though it's a rare occurrence. When that happens, you do NOT want to blow out the blockage with nitrogen! You will break the drain line before any ice comes out.

Sam and Bryan also discuss:

  • Driving the temperature down
  • Low charge as a cause of freezing
  • Considerations for various system types
  • Using a scale for charging
  • Heat pumps in heat mode
  • ECM motor failures
 

Learn more about Refrigeration Technologies HERE.

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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 made possible by our sponsors.

0:09.2

And our sponsors are carrier and carrier.com, navac and navac global dot com

0:14.8

refrigeration technologies at refriggedec.com

0:17.6

they make viper and venom packs

0:20.5

and nylon and all kinds of great chemicals that are well thought out and that work great for technology. and at Sweet Process.com. If your company has a hard time developing new processes and

0:34.8

procedures for your organization or you find yourself repeating yourself over and

0:38.9

over you're going to want to take a look at sweet process.

0:42.8

Use the link sweet process.com slash HVAC school

0:48.0

to sign up now for a extended 28 day free trial.

0:51.9

That's sweet process.com slash

0:54.1

HVAC school.

0:55.6

When you don't know who to turn to, when life is getting you down, when you really need a friend,

1:10.0

don't listen to this podcast. It's all about boring air conditioning talk from this guy, Brian Orr.

1:18.0

Yo, thanks for listening to the HVAC School podcast, the podcast that helps you remember some things you might have

1:23.8

forgotten along the way as well as helps you remember some things you forgot to

1:27.3

know in the first place and today we're talking about freezing evaporator coils.

1:31.6

And in order to cover the topic fully I brought in our surface

1:35.5

supervisor Sam Benkey. Thanks for joining us Sam.

1:39.5

Hi, thanks for having me Brian. This is good to be here. It sure is. So we are working off of one of our nine panels

1:47.9

meaning we're referring to it so you can find it somewhere. At some point these are all going to be in a book that you can buy but for right now. They're smattered across social media

1:57.6

But we try to cover things in about nine steps if possible, but we're going to do a lot more yacking than that.

2:03.0

And evaporator coils, let's start by talking about why they freeze.

...

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