OP
Hobby_Man22
Well-known member
How do you fix that? Add more vents? Or turn the fan speed down?
Yes. Over time, the water will increase the rate at which the steel corrodes. On top of that, there is probably a thin layer of insulation inside the air handler that can trap the condensate that doesn’t all run out, promoting the growth of mold.Like is the unit going to get messed up over time due to this?
It is hard to diagnose over the internet on something like this. But it is not right or good for not fixing the problem. I would think that over time, it will cause more problems. You are putting humidity back in the building. If this is issue is caused by to much air flow across the coil, then you are not correctly removing the humidity in the first place. It sounds like this is the first cooling season that this unit has ran. I dont understand why you will not call back the person that installed it. Without the correct air flow, you can not even properly check the charge. First you have to get the CFM dialed in. This is done by measuring static pressure and using the engineering data that came with the unit to calculate CFM. or using a anemometer, unless you are in the trade, theses are not common instruments for a homeowner to have. I did forget to mention in my prior post, If the fan speed is lowered, it may affect the charge. So that needs to be checked also after lowering the speed. A delta T measurement will also help tell what is going on. If this was my unit, I would fix it. I will say it again, you can not properly charge a unit until you have the correct air flow across the evaporator.So is this a problem or not really? It controls the humidity in the shop just fine. I don't really want to lower the fan speed.
Is the duct sweating, is the outside of the duct wet. You should be able to tell the difference whether the duct is sweating or water is just running out at the tapeIt does drip when running. More so on the outlet side.
It doesn't matter when it started. What matters is that you have a issue now. we have given you all possible reasons what could be causing this. We have given you solutions to fix it also. I just don't understand why you don't have the installer come back and take care of it. A brand new unit should not be doing this. Why did you have the charge checked a month ago. Was refrigerant added? or removed? Have you checked the humidity in your shop. You are not making sense, you say in your first post that it is dripping out of the end by the coil, which is the return end. But your pictures show it dripping at the supply plenum.I still don't understand why it didn't have qn issue all summer and now it is.
Either way, but it would not hurt just to fill it yourself. Pour some water down the pipe with the cap on itOne last question. Are you supposed to refill the trap with water after you clean it out or does it fill by itself?
I see what you are saying about the trap, not to much of a trap at that angle, but how would this cause water to accumulate and drip out of the supply plenum instead of dripping at the evaporator area.Yor pics tell the whole story. The trap on the main drain is REALLY shallow and pitched down. It's not allowing normal drainage when the blower is on. That's why all the dripping into the emergency pan doesn start or gets worse until after blower shut down. The auxillary drain is not supposed to be plugged, either. It should have a separate drain or be tied into the emergency pan drain and the exit for both should be where you can readily see it to notifiy you of an overflow. The primary safety switch is also supposed to be on the main drain, not the aux like yours is.
Tommy
They trap needs to have water in itDo you think the shallow trap is the issue? I thought that trap is supposed to be full of water? When I take the cap off it just has a little at the bottom trickling out.
Yep. Seen it moretimes than I can count. I won't even use those heat formed traps. I always build them up with PVC fittings, or just use a good EZ Trap if the space and funds allow.Although LS6Tommy has not weighed back in, he may be thinking that the trap is too shallow to work as a trap, and the air handler suction is interfering with the condensate out flow, thus causing it to spill into the supply plenum.
My bad. Lol I haven't seen it leak yet. Actually had the door open for a couple hours and it was running the whole time.We are waiting to see if it was actually fixed?