W_A_Watson_II
Well-known member
What brand/model of thermostat are you using for both Temp and Humidity control?
What brand/model of thermostat are you using for both Temp and Humidity control?
Good point! I'll talk to the service guy about that when he gets here some time this afternoon.
Yes, my home made marble chip contraption is to soften the furnace condensate. We'll see how that works this winter.
I'm responsible for the rerouted drain line. They had it like this:
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Hmm, that makes you think. Isn't there a humidifier on the system?
Highly unlikely as AC condenser is just outside on the other side of the wall to the left of the furnace. I'll look at them, but I assume these lines don't typically just collapse.Are there any flexible return lines that may be collapsed, kinked, or squashed in a wall or crawl you cant see?
I don't have the equipment to do that.Have you checked the temp split?
I have no idea. The thermostat that came with the Bryant system is the Evolution Delux User Interface (linked).Obviously something has changed in the system. The water from the screw hole has to be blown off from the coil or out of the pan. What kind sensors does the stat use use to trigger the malfunction message? - amp draw, temp sensors, airflow sensors?
See aboveWhat brand/model of thermostat are you using for both Temp and Humidity control?
The Evaporator is the CNPVP Preferred Series (linked). I don't see anything about baffles there.Does the I/O manual say anything about air baffles of any sort for different duct configurations?
I was on an American Standard furnace that tripped the hi limit because it was missing a baffle. It was a mult-poise furnace. Is there a default algorithm for the stat or tech troubleshooting section in the stat I/O manual or software you could access?
Just throwing out ideas to see if something sticks. Obviously has to be related to airflow and coil conditions.
Platonic Solid, I just went through this exact same scenario as you.
My house is only 1.5 yrs old. I called the HVAC guy that installed the system in the home.
Symptoms were very poor cooling performance and the water leaking from around the evaporator coil.
An inspection showed the frozen coil just like yours.
It was very low on refrigerant and he found a leak in the copper line running from the house out to the condenser unit. Repaired line, filled up with refrigerant and all is well now.
They fixed for free to boot!
You sure know your humidifiers. Right down to the **** factor of the Honeywell Truesteam. I used to have the HM506 6-Gallon per day unit that ran constantly to keep up with demand. I ended up replacing the whole unit every year no matter how often I cleaned the elements which got caked with calcium deposits from my well water. A previous service company recommend the unit and sized it. After 3 years of replacements I wised up and purchased the HM612 12-Gallon per day unit which works much better. It came with a reverse osmosis filter system which I didn't install last year, but will be installing before this winter.He has a humidifier on the return air in the upper right looks like a Honeywell steam (BTW good luck with it they are nothing but trouble). Humidifier shouldn't run in the summer unless you live in a very dry place that requires humidity year round. All of the ones in the mid-west only run with the furnace in the winter months. The humidistat is just below it, the white box on the return.
Agreed. I setup a service call. Tech will be here tomorrow afternoon.I am also putting a vote in on a/c refrigerant charge being low or TXV being restricted, if all the supplies and returns are open and not covered. I'd say your in service call territory even if you can narrow down the problem to one or the other your going to have to have a tech fix it.
I decided this was worth doing some research on. Here's what I found:I looked at the picture of the evap coil again, That black insulation in the picture is covering the remote bulb of a TXV. I think it was on this forum that I read manufactures were having a problem with an oil additive in Copeland compressors restricting the TXVs. Carrier uses Copeland scroll compressors.
I decided this was worth doing some research on. Here's what I found:
Youtube Video
R410A TXV failings across many brands
My questions are:
Does this apply to a unit installed in 2012?
If yes, who pays for repair cost?
I decided this was worth doing some research on. Here's what I found:
Youtube Video
R410A TXV failings across many brands
Service Bulletin DSB 14-0012 which appears to have claim entitlement form at the end. It doesn't have my 3 Ton model 187BNA036 condenser listed though. Only the 2.5 Ton 187BNA024 and smaller.
My questions are:
Does this apply to a unit installed in 2012?
If yes, who pays for repair cost?
I don't have the equipment to do that.
The way it lists the failure modes is latest failure mode on top with date of last occurrence.I skimmed thru the stat manual. The stat lists the last 10 failure modes, calculates static pressure and exercises the equipment. That is a neat setup. The malfunction message will be cleared when the error codes are cleared. Let us know what the tech finds.
Oh. I googled "temp split" and ended up on this page. Sounds like a good job for the IR camera.All you need is a simple probe thermometer. Check the temp in the return duct several feet from the unit and then check the output temp somewhere like the first register.
Oh. I googled "temp split" and ended up on this page. Sounds like a good job for the IR camera.
Oh. I googled "temp split" and ended up on this page. Sounds like a good job for the IR camera.
Tech was here and found a coolant leak at a brazed connection. They are paying for repair and will return tomorrow to evac the system, fix the leak and fill with new coolant.
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Kids these days...
Tech was here and found a coolant leak at a brazed connection. They are paying for repair and will return tomorrow to evac the system, fix the leak and fill with new coolant.
Found a guy who does side A/C work. He put in a used compressor for me and a friend. He used regular plumbing solder on that joint. Needless to say both joints failed and he never returned a call call about it. I guess he didn't want to have to pay for the R-22 to redo it...Or the silver solder.
I was at work while this repair was being done and it doesn't look like they replaced the drier. Hopefully that isn't a major issue.Make sure they install a new drier. The POE has a high affinity for moisture. Glad they are covering the cost.