OP
Hobby_Man22
Well-known member
I'll probably have him come back out and check the charge level. Yes this is the first season for cooling. It was installed in November.
Small line should be warm to the touch, just not real hot. Larger line should be somewhat cold, but if it is sweating and you are removing humidity, is a good sign. But checking the charge is the only way to tell. Was this unit installed by a professional.Is that line supposed to be cold? It was sweating and draining out the condensate line, but that copper line was like 80 degrees when I shot it with the temp gun. I thought it's supposed to be cold?
They never checked the charge level when they installed it. It came precharged with 15ft line set and they said that's about what they used. The outside temperature wasn't hot enough to get the system to show the correct pressures was the explanation inwas given when I asked if they were going to check the charge. Yes it was installed by one of the big name companies.Small line should be warm to the touch, just not real hot. Larger line should be somewhat cold, but if it is sweating and you are removing humidity, is a good sign. But checking the charge is the only way to tell. Was this unit installed by a professional.
edit:Is that line supposed to be cold? It was sweating and draining out the condensate line, but that copper line was like 80 degrees when I shot it with the temp gun. I thought it's supposed to be cold?
I am not an HVAC tech, but have a pretty good understanding of these systems. The 35-55 range may be your saturation temperature in the evaporator, not the temperature of the suction line. When you read pressure on that line, you convert it to saturation temperature so what you are really reading is the temp of the coldest part of the inside evaporator coil. The coil inside is picking up the heat from the building, so it will be several degrees warmer than the coldest coil temperature. 35 is a little too close to freezing and most good techs won't charge a system to the point it runs that close. Low refrigerant will cause low saturation temps and that is why inside coils freeze up, that blocks air flow, and the problem gets worse because no heat is being removed. This video is better than my rambling I am sure:Upon researching that suction line is supposed to be between 35 and 55 degrees. Sometime isn't right if it's 80. I measured right where it came out of the condenser where the filling poets are.
IR temperature "guns" are terribly inaccurate. The rely on IR reflecting back off the surface you are aiming at. Bright shiny objects will emit less IR than dull dark surfaces. they need to be told what the "emissivity" of the object is. by default they usually use a value of 0.95
If you want a accurate temp with an IR gun, spray paint the object, in this case the copper line, with flat black paint. Also, how close we you to the line wit the IR gun, you need to be pretty much touching it or it will rear the temp of what ever is behind the line. Hard to get a temp with an IR gun on a small object lie a 7/8" copper line.I realized that. The copper.was.far.from.bright and shiny. There was a guy on YouTube that put a piece of painters tape on the line for a more accurate reading.
Is it true that the pressures won't read correctly if the outside temp isn't warm enough? It was like 65-70 degrees at the time of install. That's why they didn't check. They just said to call them up in the winter time if it's not heating.A good tech will hook up gauges and test subcooling and superheat. I did HVAC service for years. New units would came charged, most were not charged like the factory claimed the were. I always ran tests on a new unit and most of the time had to adjust the refrigerant charge.
Is it true that the pressures won't read correctly if the outside temp isn't warm enough? It was like 65-70 degrees at the time of install. That's why they didn't check. They just said to call them up in the winter time if it's not heating.
If you know what you are doing you can test the charge on an air conditioner in most any temps. I have done it multiple times with snow on the ground. 65-70 degrees is a piece of cake! There are things you need to do to account for the temps, but certainly way easier that trying to do it in the winter.Is it true that the pressures won't read correctly if the outside temp isn't warm enough? It was like 65-70 degrees at the time of install. That's why they didn't check. They just said to call them up in the winter time if it's not heating.
What did you do for air sealing?I put R30 on both the ceiling and the walls. Of course since it's a metal building that's all it has, but that's supposed to be above code for my area I believe. R30 on walls was overkill, but it fit inside the red purlons without anything holding it up, so I went with that. Only cost me $4k
What did you do for air sealing?
Most buildings like that leak air like a seive without some sort of barrier
In general, your AC should be sized so it runs just about continuously on the hottest day.Okay I've left it on a few days the lowest she will do is 77. It was 95 outside though. Set at 77 it ran continuously. So I either need more insulation than the R30 or a bigger a.c.
... you said it was above code.R30 is the minimum code btw. I'm not sure who on here said it was above code.
How do you insulate the slab?So if the slab isn't insulated is it a losing battle?
The Delta T means nothing without measuring subcooling and superheat, humidity. The humidity could be 95% and you would get a poor Delta T and the system is working fine.Have you measured the air temp moving through the evaporator coil. the difference between those two temps is called Delta T.
I have seen many tons of ship move fast through the water with a Delta T of only something like 2 or 3 degrees. No Delta T, means no cooling or heating. It's all about getting a Delta T.
It's finished. I have the door seals on too. I think I need to have the charge checked on the unit. Or I need more insulation.Another thing. I have a 24x38 shop with 9 foot ceilings, (8,200 cubic feet) I air condition easily with 1-1/2 tons. It was 105F here the other day when I turned on the AC and it cooled it down to 72 degrees in a reasonable time. I am not sure how long as I wasn't paying attention, but certainly less than an hour.
You have a 30x50 x12 or 18,000 cubic feet that you can not cool to your satisfaction with 5 tons. Your cubic feet is 2-1/4 times the size of mine, so 1-1/2 tons x 2-1/4 = 3.375 tons. Four tons should cool it easily.
FIX YOUR INSULATION!!!