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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

The Basics of Moving Heat

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Education, Business, Self-improvement, Careers

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 22 September 2016

⏱️ 44 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this episode of HVAC School, Bryan talks to some apprentices about basic thermodynamics. That is the fancy scientific way of saying that we're moving heat.

The way we think of "hot" and "cold" is relative to our comfort. However, the scientific concepts of "hot" and "cold" are very different from our relative understandings of those qualities. For instance, there is only ONE value of "cold" in the universe: absolute zero (0 kelvins, -460°F). Any temperature above that contains heat.

Heat and temperature are NOT synonymous. Instead, heat refers to molecular motion, and temperature is an average measurement of molecular motion. Therefore, not all heat results in a temperature change. For example, adding heat to an ice cube at 32°F (0°C) changes the ice cube from a solid to liquid water. The heat added is called latent heat. Heat cannot move unless there is a differential in temperature, and it always moves from an object with more heat to one with less heat. Everything in nature tends towards equilibrium, and heat is no exception. In those cases, heat transfer will theoretically occur until both objects are at the same temperature.

There are three main methods of moving heat: conduction, convection, and radiation. Conduction moves heat when a warmer object touches a cooler one. Convection occurs when heat moves through a fluid. Radiation occurs when heat moves on electromagnetic waves, such as when the sun's heat passes through a window.

Join us as we cover:

  • Heat & temperature and the difference
  • Boiling and superheat
  • Fahrenheit, Celsius, and Kelvin scales
  • Absolute zero
  • Molecular motion
  • Hot and cold
  • British Thermal Units (BTUs)
  • Tons of air conditioning (and BTU/ton)
  • Energy conversions
  • Pressure and its effect on temperature
  • Conduction, convection, radiation
  • How heat transfer works in HVAC/R systems

 

If you want to learn more about heat transfer, check out this article.

As always, if you have an iPhone, subscribe 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 the HVAC School Podcast is brought to you by HVAC-HAC-HACs.

0:07.0

HACs. Don't be a hack. A hack. Quiet.

0:14.0

Quiet. Quiet down you filthy muts.

0:25.0

Why hello ma'am, how are you today? I'm here to have a look at your air conditioner for you.

0:31.0

I think I need some Freon.

0:34.1

Well actually ma'am, freeon is a trade name by DuPont.

0:37.7

Started off with refrigerant R12 and then carried over to R22 but only on DuPont products. The name we like to use is

0:45.0

refrigerant. Look dude I don't care how smart you are. I just want to be cold in

0:51.2

my house. You may be shocked to find out that cold actually isn't a thing.

0:55.4

What you're observing when you feel cold inside of your house is the absence of heat against your

1:01.2

skin. Listen here, shabag.

1:04.0

I don't need a sermon I just want my furnace fixed.

1:08.0

To be truthful with you, you actually don't have a furnace.

1:12.0

You have a heat pump system and the inside unit we like to call a fan coil or possibly an air handler

1:20.3

You must have been listening to that son of a bitch Brian or in his annoying

1:25.4

HVAC school podcast. This is Brian Orr just like last

1:46.2

time and the reason for that kind of silly intro is just to highlight what I

1:50.0

don't want out of this which is people who haven't been in the trade that long taking

1:54.7

fancy theory words and using them to think that you really know what you're talking about.

2:00.1

There's the common things of what's not free on its refrigerant or whatever.

2:05.0

Ultimately what matters is the ability to do your job to fix air conditioners well to serve customers and

2:10.0

ultimately to progress in the trade.

...

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