View Full Version : Tech said unit is fine, so now what? It's hot!
utbigrod
07-10-2012, 10:26 PM
Okay, I'm having some issues with my A/C keeping up with the heat. It got pretty hot in here on a 100 day (82ish), but I know that is probably to be expected. The issue is that the A/C is just running and running and takes a very long time to cool. My home is ~2700 sqft and the thermostat is at the bottom of a 2 story great room. Not sure how to know how many tons my A/C unit is, but it says it had 6.63lb of R-22 charged at the factory. From the model it looks like it is 48k btu's. The unit is was installed in either 1996 or 2001 I believe.
I had a tech out today and he checked the refrigerant and everything looked fine he said. I had manually checked the drop across the coil by measuring before the air filter and at the top of the plenum where the a-coil is housed (I have a gas forced air furnace with a-coil in the basement). The drop was between 11 and 13 degrees depending on when I checked it. 13 was after I used coil cleaner on the outside condenser unit. the a-coil was clean as well.
So the tech basically said it was doing all it could and nothing was wrong with it. Would you expect more than a 13 degree drop? Also I went out to the condenser outside and while it was running the air coming out of the top almost seemed cool. I'm used to that air being very hot as it pulls the heat out of the refrigerant and over the coils. Not sure if that has anything to do with it, but just an observation.
Other than an energy audit is there anything I could/should do at this point?
thanks!
NY2GA01
07-10-2012, 10:38 PM
take a picture of the service tag on the condenser and post it, or post the modle and serial number. That will help us tell you what size it is.
AddMore22
07-10-2012, 10:51 PM
Seems to me that I is undercharged .. It's hard to say... Need more info.
hewitt
07-10-2012, 11:46 PM
Need subcooling, superheat and type of metering device
utbigrod
07-11-2012, 01:14 PM
Here is a pic of the service tag, I believe it is a Bryant:
http://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-Nn_MF9eKTAA/T_20HP39DpI/AAAAAAAADVc/UBTXJHrbCow/s800/IMG_20120710_222043.jpg
AddMore22, what other info do you need?
thanks!
Brad
second opinion
07-11-2012, 01:20 PM
Here is a pic of the service tag, I believe it is a Bryant:
http://lh3.googleusercontent.com/-Nn_MF9eKTAA/T_20HP39DpI/AAAAAAAADVc/UBTXJHrbCow/s800/IMG_20120710_222043.jpg
AddMore22, what other info do you need?
thanks!
Brad
It is a 4 ton unit. Did the service ticket have any information on it as fare as temperatures, pressures, airflow in cfm?
hcong
07-11-2012, 01:40 PM
Okay, I'm having some issues with my A/C keeping up with the heat. It got pretty hot in here on a 100 day (82ish), but I know that is probably to be expected. The issue is that the A/C is just running and running and takes a very long time to cool. My home is ~2700 sqft and the thermostat is at the bottom of a 2 story great room. Not sure how to know how many tons my A/C unit is, but it says it had 6.63lb of R-22 charged at the factory. From the model it looks like it is 48k btu's. The unit is was installed in either 1996 or 2001 I believe.
I had a tech out today and he checked the refrigerant and everything looked fine he said. I had manually checked the drop across the coil by measuring before the air filter and at the top of the plenum where the a-coil is housed (I have a gas forced air furnace with a-coil in the basement). The drop was between 11 and 13 degrees depending on when I checked it. 13 was after I used coil cleaner on the outside condenser unit. the a-coil was clean as well.
So the tech basically said it was doing all it could and nothing was wrong with it. Would you expect more than a 13 degree drop? Also I went out to the condenser outside and while it was running the air coming out of the top almost seemed cool. I'm used to that air being very hot as it pulls the heat out of the refrigerant and over the coils. Not sure if that has anything to do with it, but just an observation.
Other than an energy audit is there anything I could/should do at this point?
thanks!
From a design point of view, is the 100 F summer temp normal in your city? I know we are getting heat waves across the country and the a/c units might not be designed for the high temperatures. Check your airflow and temperature through your registers. If your unit is working perfectly, it could be your duct work.
Your observation is correct, the outdoor condensing unit should be expelling hot air (air temp is higher than the outdoor temperature). When the outdoors temperature is really hot, the unit had to work harder to make the refrigerant hotter so heat transfer can occur.
udarrell
07-11-2012, 05:42 PM
Okay, I'm having some issues with my A/C keeping up with the heat. It got pretty hot in here on a 100 day (82ish), but I know that is probably to be expected.
...My home is ~2700 sqft and the thermostat is at the bottom of a 2 story great room...The unit was installed in either 1996 or 2001.
I had a tech out today and he checked the refrigerant and everything looked fine. I had manually checked the drop across the coil by measuring before the air filter and at the top of the plenum where the a-coil is housed (I have a gas forced air furnace with a-coil in the basement). The drop was between 11 and 13 degrees depending on when I checked it. 13 was after I used coil cleaner on the outside condenser unit. the a-coil was clean as well.Would you expect more than a 13 degree drop?
Also I went out to the condenser outside and while it was running the air coming out of the top almost seemed cool. I'm used to that air being very hot as it pulls the heat out of the refrigerant and over the coils. Not sure if that has anything to do with it, but just an observation.
Other than an energy audit is there anything I could/should do at this point? thanks!
You need to check the temp of the condenser discharge air & also the temp of the outdoor air near the condenser so we can establish the temp-split.
According to your comment (air feels cool off condenser)it sounds like there is not enough heatload on the indoor coil or there is a problem in the refrigerant system...
For some accuracy in both indoor & outdoor temp-splits you'll need to get a humidity gauge (available at most hardware stores) to get the indoor %relative humidity.
At 95F outdoors & 80F indoors & 50% RH; the indoor temp-split between SA & RA should be around 20 or 21F, not 13F, but we don't know what the INDOOR humidity was, that affects the temp-split.
catmanacman
07-11-2012, 07:24 PM
Call the same company back tell them its not cooling and you would like it checked again
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