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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Recovery, Evacuation, and Dehydration Facts

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

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

4.8985 Ratings

🗓️ 12 January 2017

⏱️ 35 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

n this episode, Bryan covers evacuation, recovery, and dehydration.

Evacuation refers to putting a vacuum pump on the system and pulling it down. We use a few different measures of vacuum, including inches of mercury ("Hg) or microns (millionths of a meter of mercury). We use such small units to measure a vacuum that effectively boils off moisture in the system. You must pull the vacuum very close to a perfect vacuum. So, a measurement of 500 microns indicates that the vacuum is 500 microns of mercury above a perfect vacuum.

Dehydration is a mere component (or result) of evacuation. If there is excess moisture in the system, it can freeze inside the system and cause blockages. It can also interact with oil and refrigerant inside the system to create an acid that ruins your unit.

To get a proper vacuum, you have to pull down to 500 microns. You can go lower than that, if possible, but 500 microns is the industry standard. Remember that Schrader cores restrict your vacuum. Remove them with a proper core remover tool for a more effective evacuation. Larger hoses and better equipment won't make a difference if you leave those Schrader cores in. If you don't have Schraders, you probably have a service valve.

Recovery removes refrigerant from a system under vacuum and puts it in a tank. We do recovery because we CANNOT vent refrigerant.

As a best practice, when you connect your vacuum rig to the port, you can use a little bit of Nylog thread sealant to keep moisture and other contaminants out.

Bryan also covers:

  • Push/pull method
  • Microns
  • Vacuum pump oil
  • Moisture contamination
  • Vacuum restrictions
  • Triple evacuation and sweeping nitrogen
  • King valves/service valves
  • De minimis

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

HVAC School and the HVAC

0:07.7

PODcast is made possible because of generous support by carrier. Now I've been a carrier dealer for about 11 years and really when I first started my business I knew that I wanted to be a carrier dealer and at the time I think I think my first year I think I sold like, I don't know, $75,000 worth of equipment.

0:25.5

I mean, hardly anything.

0:27.8

And Carrier was willing to work with me because I had been through so many of their classes

0:31.8

and they kind of felt comfortable that I wasn't

0:34.0

gonna screw it up too much.

0:35.9

Thankfully they didn't actually inspect some of my early jobs because they probably wouldn't

0:39.6

have approved, but I've learned a lot over the years working with Carrier and they've always supported me and they've been a very good partner and so it made a lot of sense when they

0:49.2

stepped up and let me know that they wanted to sponsor the HVAC school podcast.

0:53.4

Carriers shown a real commitment to the people who actually work on air

0:56.9

conditioners over the years and I appreciate it and I encourage you to

1:01.4

consider carrier

1:03.8

turn to the experts

1:06.1

also wanted to mention H.Vac.

1:09.6

Hac.com they just put up a new page on HVAC hacks called News and where they post a lot of industry news for HVAC and Justin Skinner who's contributed a lot to HVAC school created an article about Wi-Fi thermostats and sort of the technician mindset

1:26.5

surrounding Wi-Fi thermostats.

1:28.9

So check it out.

1:30.9

Read Justin's article and support him. HVac-H-Vac--C-H-HACs, and whispers, Freon ain't free.

1:50.4

Every time he finds a leaking braise joint on a warranty call.

1:54.0

Brian Orr.

1:56.0

Hey, you are here on HVAC school.

2:01.0

I'm not, you're not on the school because then I would hear your feet on the

...

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