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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Impacts of Compression Changes - Short #94

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Careers, Business, Self-improvement, Education

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 12 May 2020

⏱️ 17 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast, Bryan talks about the impacts of compression and airflow changes. He also discusses some of the ramifications of those changes.

In order for us to energize the second stage of a compressor, we need to energize both Y1 AND Y2. On stage 2, we're running that compressor at full speed (350-450 CFM per ton). The compressor will also perform at rated capacity. When you stage down to stage 1, your blower should ramp down, and the compressor should produce less capacity (move less refrigerant). When moving less refrigerant, the compressor should use less current but still be cooled properly.

Naturally, the suction pressure goes up while the head pressure goes down when we ramp down the compressor. However, when you reduce the blower speed at the same time, your evaporator coil picks up less heat. In that case, the suction pressure would drop. You normally don't want the suction pressure to go up in the low stage from the high stage.

The impacts of compression changes are multifaceted, and there are several moving parts to think about when it comes to capacity. When the compressor slows down, it moves less refrigerant over the same period of time; your compression ratio goes down if your airflow over the evaporator coil remains the same. However, if the airflow drops proportionally, then your suction pressure should stay close to the same. If the compressor pumps the same amount of refrigerant, the suction pressure will drop. If the compressor pumps less refrigerant proportionally to the airflow, then the suction pressure should remain the same theoretically, but it usually increases.

An increase in suction pressure results in a lower compression ratio, which is good for efficiency.

Bryan also discusses:

  • Floating the evaporator temperature
  • Broken valves on reciprocating compressors
  • Improperly seated scrolls
  • Improper tonnage ratings across components
  • Oversized coils
 

Learn more about Refrigeration Technologies HERE.

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Hey, this is the HVAC School Podcast. I'm Brian, and this is the podcast that helps you remember some things

0:08.3

you might have forgotten along the way, as well as helps you remember some things you forgot

0:12.0

to know in the first place.

0:13.0

And the main thing you need to know is that right now you are with friends.

0:17.0

I miss the Masters. I'm unashamedly, maybe a little ashamedly. I'm a golf fan,

0:22.0

and I really like the Masters. It's one of my

0:24.0

lifelong dreams to be able to play golf at Augusta National, which by the way if any

0:28.9

if you have some sort of weird backdoor hookup I would be forever in your dad. I mean I can't tell you how

0:36.1

much free air conditioning dubious quality of course air conditioning training I would be

0:40.7

happy to give if I could play one round of golf at

0:43.4

Augusta National. That is my entire bucket list summed up but anyway I

0:47.2

digress Jim Nance would always say hello friends whenever he would announce

0:51.9

the Masters and since the Masters has been moved, I just keep saying it.

0:55.7

Different versions of that phrase. But anyway, you don't care about that. Today we're going to talk about

1:00.0

compressor pumping, which couldn't be further removed from a high-brow

1:05.0

master's pomp and circumstance, but we're going to talk about compressor pumping and

1:09.1

some ways of thinking about it that I think will help if you haven't thought of it in this way before.

1:14.0

But before that I want to thank our sponsors, first off Field Piece.

1:17.0

Field Piece.com, they have the new Jobling Bluetooth monometers that work with the Jobling app as well as Measure Quick,

1:22.2

the JL3, KM2.

1:24.0

They're great.

1:25.0

You're gonna love them because they're individual monometers,

...

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