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HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

TXV vs. EEV - Short #278

HVAC School - For Techs, By Techs

Bryan Orr

Careers, Business, Self-improvement, Education

4.91K Ratings

🗓️ 10 February 2026

⏱️ 12 minutes

🧾️ Download transcript

Summary

In this short podcast episode, Bryan breaks down the differences between a thermostatic expansion valve (TXV) and an electronic expansion valve (EEV). He highlights their strengths and weaknesses.

In the basic refrigerant circuit, the metering device drops the pressure. TXVs and EEVs are both metering devices that cause the liquid refrigerant to drop in pressure and become a liquid-vapor mixture; they control evaporator feeding and maintain a constant superheat.

TXVs achieve this by mechanical means; the bulb responds to suction line temperature and evaporator pressure at the valve. They are self-contained and easy to diagnose with basic refrigeration measurements. However, they are prone to mechanical failures, including clogged orifices and screens, cracked capillary tubes, and powerhead leaks. Installation errors are also easy to make, and TXVs can hunt in low-load conditions. Overall, failures are often mechanical and refrigerant-related. They win in the simplicity department.

EEVs receive inputs from sensors and modulate in response to those digital signals. They have a wider modulation range and maintain stable control in low-superheat applications, and they do well in conditions with highly variable loads or where coordination across multiple coils is required. EEVs come in two types: stepper motor (small, discrete steps) and PWM (controlled solenoid valves). Stepper-style EEVs excel at fine positioning, and PWM-style EEVs are in applications that require a more robust valve (like CO2 refrigeration). EEV failures are often electromechanical or related to sensor control. They win in the controllability department.

There is no "best" metering device; they merely have different strengths that make them better suited to different applications. However, EEVs are the future due to the greater degree of controllability we will need in newer equipment. Commissioning and airflow are also crucial for getting the most out of both metering device types in terms of longevity and reliability.

 

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Transcript

Click on a timestamp to play from that location

0:00.0

Yeah, Bada Dubble. This is the HVAC school podcast. I'm Brian. This is a short episode

0:08.8

in which we are going to talk about the TXV versus the EEV, the great metering device war,

0:17.4

as it's called by nobody. But before we do that, we want to thank our great sponsors.

0:22.3

Carrier and Carrier.com.

0:24.3

I've been a carrier dealer for many years.

0:26.9

Carrier has their new green speed extreme, super high efficiency heat pumps out on the market now.

0:33.5

Find out more by going to Carrier.com.

0:36.8

Refrigeration Technologies at Refrigetec.com.

0:41.3

Navak and Navakglobal.com and the break-free power flaring tool.

0:47.3

Model NEF6LM.

0:50.6

Field Piece and Fieldpeace University.

0:53.8

Fieldpeace offers high-quality product training for HVAC tax and distributors.

0:59.0

Whether you're using the tools or selling them, Field Piece has training options for you.

1:04.2

There are categories for evacuation, recovery, leak detection, and heating.

1:09.2

Within the course, for heating appliances, you get to learn how to do

1:12.1

combustion analysis and measure static and gas pressure. All very important things to know. If

1:16.9

you're a technician who's working on gas, let me tell you. It's all interactive. Learn how to use

1:21.3

the tools like job link probes and how they pair with apps to help you analyze the system,

1:26.1

create invoices, and so, so, so much more.

1:30.6

That's three soes.

1:31.4

That's a lot of soes.

1:32.5

Some courses even have Nate credits like the Recovery Best Practices and VFD troubleshooting

...

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