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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Replacing a Compressor from Start to Finish

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 3 November 2016

⏱️ 53 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this podcast episode, Bryan goes over best practices for diagnosing and replacing an A/C or refrigeration compressor. 

When testing for a shorted compressor, make sure the compressor is isolated from all of its circuitry. You would see low ohms to ground in a shorted compressor. Do NOT measure from winding to winding or terminal to terminal to diagnose a short.

You may also come across an open winding failure. In the case of an open compressor, the power is going to the compressor, but it's not doing anything. 

Locked compressors also go out on internal overload and draw high amps. Try your best to unlock the compressor but be realistic about the state of compressor health.

Poor compression also indicates a failure. You would typically see low head pressure and high suction pressure with low system capacity.

When replacing the compressor, you'll want to start off by knowing the type of failure that was diagnosed. Reconfirm the diagnosis. Then, do your acid test and make sure you have a matching capacitor and enough refrigerant to do the job. Know your connection types, compressor model, and warranty status.

Fully recover the old refrigerant charge and remove all existing driers in the system. Braze in the new compressor and pressurize the lines with nitrogen. Bubble-test all new joints and check them thoroughly. Then, pull your vacuum before adding charge by weighing a factory charge into the liquid line.

When you power on the unit, monitor the performance and inspect the unit closely.

Bryan also discusses:

  • Clarification on flowing nitrogen
  • Learning theory vs. application
  • Pulling terminals off
  • Proper megohmmeter use
  • "Redneck" test (running the system without the compressor)
  • Acid and oil testing
  • Hard start kits and oil migration
  • Accumulators and acid protocols
  • Suction line driers
  • Mufflers
  • Vacuum pump oil
 

If you have an iPhone, subscribe to the podcast HERE, and if you have an Android phone, subscribe HERE.

 

Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

This episode of HVAC School, sponsored by HVAC-HAC-HAC.com.

0:09.8

HVAC HACs reminding you, don't be a hack. So anytime you put something out on the internet or you

0:17.0

write something about a topic, it can run the risk of it coming off like you're saying you're the expert in the topic

0:25.7

and I'm certainly not the expert in everything air conditioning.

0:30.3

I've got some experience and I want to share what it is that I know but I also want to

0:34.1

curate the experience of a lot of other people and it was kind of funny because when I

0:39.0

hopped in the van with one of my texts I was going to shoot a video about replacing a

0:42.8

duckless blower it was pretty clear that you know there's some things that aren't

0:46.7

perfect first off his steering wheel looks like it's about to fall off then second

0:51.2

I'm off his van sounds like it's about to fall apart.

0:54.0

Right now, really?

0:56.0

What? Right now? Really?

0:58.0

Already?

0:59.0

Right now? Really what?

1:00.0

Yeah, I can see the red light. I'm not.

1:01.0

You think I'm recording?

1:02.0

I really, I like your steering wheel yeah that's

1:06.7

true cover that you have it's nice so we're we're headed well we're going to go out and then we're going to make holy smoke. What does that sound?

1:17.0

That is probably my CV joints. But when they changed the tires and the rotors, they said that that was normal?

1:25.6

No, they just said that everything was working good.

1:28.7

And you know Yokey's.

1:30.4

He would tell me if there was something bad.

...

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