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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Suction Line Traps - Short #97

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 16 June 2020

⏱️ 13 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, Bryan explains what suction line traps and inverted traps are. He also covers the purposes they serve.

It's a bit hard to find literature on suction line traps, so it's always best to read the manual and follow the manufacturer's guidelines. We traditionally use P-traps on suction lines to hold oil and let it go up the walls of the refrigerant piping. You need enough velocity to lift oil (mineral or alkylbenzene) up the riser. We know that POE carries much easier with refrigerants than mineral oil; it is very miscible with common refrigerants. That's why it's especially important to get all of the mineral oil out of retrofit systems.

In refrigeration, we have lower temperatures, pressures, and densities; that combination adversely impacts oil carry. Oil logging is a bigger concern even with POE oil. So, P-trapping with POE oil is a more common practice in refrigeration than it is in air conditioning.

In air conditioning, we can make a case for the inverted trap: in an air handler that's higher than the condenser, we want the suction line to go above the air handler and then go down into the evaporator coil. When the system goes off, there is still refrigerant in the evaporator coil, so refrigerant will condense into a liquid. We don't want that liquid to rush down the suction line and into the compressor upon startup, so we use an inverted trap to prevent flooded starts from happening. However, we can use hard shutoff TXVs and other strategies to prevent liquid refrigerant migration. Unfortunately, inverted traps can also keep mineral oil stuck in the evaporator coil.

 

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 Short Podcast that helps you remember

0:09.3

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

0:12.0

you might have forgotten in the first place. I've forgotten to know in the first place I should say and

0:16.4

this episode is going to be about traps and inverted traps in refrigerant suction

0:21.7

lines or vapor lines if you're working on a heat pump.

0:25.0

But before we get into that, I want to thank our sponsors and our sponsors are carrier and carrier

0:29.3

dot com, carrier long-time supporter of the podcast and the equipment we sell at

0:34.2

Kailos. Also refrigeration technologies at refriggedech.com refrigeration

0:38.3

technologies now makes a hand sanitizer they also make a rated disinfectant, a disinfectant that is rated by the

0:46.5

EPA to help to treat SARS COV2, good old COVID-19 as we often know it, and then also the new Venom

0:57.6

packs from refrigeration technologies are really great. You can find all

1:00.2

these products by going to Refrigeech.com, the Refrigeration Technologies's website.

1:05.6

Navac and Navac Global.com, they make some of the best vacuum pumps recovery machines and tubing

1:11.0

pipe fitting tools for our industry.

1:13.2

Swedge tool, flaring tool,

1:15.2

benders, anything you might want for working with copper.

1:18.3

I really like all of their copper tools.

1:20.6

You can find them all by going to

1:22.4

True Tech Tools.com.

1:23.4

TRU tech tools.com use the offer code get schooled for a great discount to check

1:28.1

out also field piece and fieldpiece.com I've been talking a lot about the new

1:32.1

job link monometers you can find those as well as all of the

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