I had a problem with my air conditioning system that froze. Had a tech come out and put 3 pounds of 410 an into the system, along with a leak stopper.
The unit itself has a drain and that drain appears to be draining outside my house.
My drain pan cannot properly be pitched so there is no drain attached to it. I’ve been checking it over the past day since the unit has been put back into service and there’s quite a bit of fluid building up in my pan. I’d say I’m getting about a gallon every 12 hours. I’ve been removing it with a small wet, dry vacuum.
My question is is this normal? It’s been pretty hot here and it’s pretty warm in the attic space where the unit is. I never really paid much attention to it as long as the air conditioning is working so I don’t know if having some fluid there is normal. I guess, as long as it evaporates before it overflows the tray I never would’ve noticed it.
Next question is, is there a pump that I can put in there that will automatically turn on and off to remove the buildup of fluid in such a shallow pan? I’d say it’s probably about an inch deep max. I do have an outlet there. I can plug into then I can just run the tube out the same hole where the main drain for the unit is exiting the house. Ideally this pump would just sit in my drain pan and have some type of float so when the level got to say half of an inch it would pump out and turn itself off.
Thanks



The unit itself has a drain and that drain appears to be draining outside my house.
My drain pan cannot properly be pitched so there is no drain attached to it. I’ve been checking it over the past day since the unit has been put back into service and there’s quite a bit of fluid building up in my pan. I’d say I’m getting about a gallon every 12 hours. I’ve been removing it with a small wet, dry vacuum.
My question is is this normal? It’s been pretty hot here and it’s pretty warm in the attic space where the unit is. I never really paid much attention to it as long as the air conditioning is working so I don’t know if having some fluid there is normal. I guess, as long as it evaporates before it overflows the tray I never would’ve noticed it.
Next question is, is there a pump that I can put in there that will automatically turn on and off to remove the buildup of fluid in such a shallow pan? I’d say it’s probably about an inch deep max. I do have an outlet there. I can plug into then I can just run the tube out the same hole where the main drain for the unit is exiting the house. Ideally this pump would just sit in my drain pan and have some type of float so when the level got to say half of an inch it would pump out and turn itself off.
Thanks



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