If the reversing valve is bleeding by then your suction will get warmer after the valve and the hot gas will get cooler after the valve. Do you have that or did you check.
Hey guys I have a system that's driving me crazy I have what you could call perfect pressures but only 72 degrees suction line temp. Unit pumps down with no problem ,no ristrictions. So I'm already at a new txv and new compressor and same problem. Unit still under warranty. Only thing I can think is reversing valve bleeding ! It's not noisy or stuck
If the reversing valve is bleeding by then your suction will get warmer after the valve and the hot gas will get cooler after the valve. Do you have that or did you check.
About 5 degree difference on suction didn't check hot gas side. But if I manually revese from cool to heat and wait a bit and reverse it again it starts to cool for about 10 seconds but once it stabilizes back to cooling it won't drop from 72 average suction line temp
what is perfect pressures and what is your superheat and subcooling?
Subcoolig at 12 low side 79/80 ( 84 inside house). High side 245/250 , evaporator coil gets completely wet when panels on a/h is opened to check coil behavior. (no signs or behavior of restrictions )
Gonna tackle it again tomorrow to see what is temp difference at R V on hot gas , thanks
If I run itin heat the out door coil suction one won't get cold. There for its same behavior for indoor and outdoor coil. It's a Trane heat pump.
You'll be spinning your wheels. It's only the temp rise on the cold lines in and out that you need to measure. Bypassing will not cause a temperature difference across the hot lines in and out. If you pour a beer into a lake, does the can fill up with lake water? Thats an analogy. In any case, it isn't the reversing valve. When a reversing valve is bypassing suction pressure runs higher than normal. Your suction pressure is normal.
Was the LLFD changed out when any of the other parts were changed?
This is R22?
Yeah r22 new filter drier new txv new compressor , same behavior with both coil if reversed from heat to cool condenser coil won't cool in heating and evap coil in cool. No ristrictions
Wow. judging by your first post sir. You should call trane tech support before you replace anymore parts. Make sure your check valves are seating properly and hopefully you changed the dryer. Why again was the compressor changed
Old compressor every once in a while would trip breaker on start up, new compressor works excellent
So its warranty and your not sure if it was like this before you worked on it ? How about some air temps, dry/ wet and if its new you should have a charge chart. Some conditions are going to give you a high super heat what's you Target subcool , what's you temp split on the coil?
Sent from my PC36100 using Tapatalk 2
10 degrees sub cooling and I'm at 12 ( bumped it a bit to see if anything change) temp difference is 13 to 14 across coil (return to supply)
It's not the compressor, not the reversing valve and you tried a new TXV. Try running the subcooling up 3 or 4 more degrees. If that doesn't do anything, slow the blower, or restrict the airflow some and see what happens.
what is your superheat? sounds like everything is working normal. a bleeding reversing valve in cooling would create a high discharge superheat. what is your discharge superheat?
from over here you could have return air being drawn in from attic which is causing high superheat or too much airflow. could also have a restriction in your suction line.
I'd put a tap on the compressor discharge line, and I be I would see what w wrong then.
Did you check supply air temp at furnace or look at the stat? I'm with the guy who said you might be pulling attic air. If that's not it you might pull the bulb on the TXV and see if that changes your superheat. Trane has had a lot of TXV failures.
80# suction with a 72 line temp would be 24 degree superheat. Your not that far off. Did you leave it running? might look better after the house cools off.