4.8 • 985 Ratings
🗓️ 5 December 2016
⏱️ 61 minutes
🧾️ Download transcript
In this episode of HVAC School, Bryan covers the basics of heat pumps.
Heat pumps are common technologies in Florida. They reverse the sequence of the typical refrigerant circuit: the indoor coil can become the condenser, and the outdoor coil can become the evaporator. Heat pumps can achieve that transition via a reversing valve, which changes the directions of the suction and discharge lines. They also have two metering devices.
Reversing valves contain a solenoid (typically 24v) that rediverts the suction and discharge lines via shifting the slider with a pressure differential. Pilot tubes shift gas from one side of the slider to the other, which shifts it and triggers heat mode or cooling mode. Reversing valves are typically energized in cool mode (except for Ruud/Rheem reversing valves; they energize in heat mode).
Defrosting is rarely necessary for us in Florida, but it can be a scary occurrence when we do need it. The outdoor coil can freeze over entirely when it gets cold enough due to Florida's high humidity. Hot gas goes through the coils during defrosting, and it may make alarming noises. Many Floridian heat pumps also use auxiliary heat strips to provide heat while the system defrosts. Many defrosts rely on set times and sensors to determine when to initiate and terminate defrost. (That is true of heat pumps AND most refrigeration systems.) Thermistors are common sensing technologies used in defrost.
Join Bryan on this informative monologue about:
For a more detailed written explanation of heat pump reversing valves with pictures, check out this article.
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0:00.0 | This episode on the HVAC School Podcast is sponsored by HVAC-HAC-HAC. |
0:05.0 | HAC. Dot-HAC. Don't be a hack. I'm just attracted to copper. I see a service valve and it just |
0:17.0 | attracted to copper. I see a service valve and it just starts braising. I can't |
0:22.4 | help myself. |
0:25.0 | His wife said she was feeling burned out, |
0:27.0 | so he installed a suction dryer on her. |
0:30.0 | Don't worry, he came back later and removed it and performed an acid test. |
0:34.1 | Your host, Brian Orr. |
0:36.8 | Hey, thanks for listening. |
0:38.6 | This is Brian here, Brian Orr, and this is the HVAC school podcast and so today it's just me and I'm going to be |
0:45.3 | talking about heat pumps and one thing that's interesting or maybe interesting to |
0:50.6 | you is that for me when someone talks about split system |
0:54.4 | air conditioning I automatically default to heat pumps like that's just what I |
0:58.4 | think of because that's what I've worked on the bulk of my career and since I |
1:02.4 | was really since I was 16 years old and sometimes |
1:05.4 | what's tricky is that when you've done something for so long you take |
1:08.6 | certain things for granted so I'm gonna kind of slow down here and just go step by step through a heat |
1:14.1 | pump and the different components and sequence of operation and some |
1:17.2 | diagnosis tips. I'm not going to do everything because to do everything |
1:21.2 | would be an extremely long podcast and I don't really want to do an |
1:25.2 | extremely long podcast. So we're going to take a good solid summary look at heat pumps. |
1:30.4 | It's going to cover the basics and kind of from from the top. So to start with, what is a heat |
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