Ref Basics
Ref Basics
Ref Basics
Basics
The closed looped pipe system stops the refrigerant from becoming
contaminated and controls its stream. The refrigerant will be both a
vapor and a liquid in the loop.
Latent Heat- The heat required to change a liquid to a gas (or the heat
that must be removed from a gas to condense it to a liquid)
liquid), without any
change in temperature.
The Compressor
The Condensing Coil
The Metering Device
The Evaporator
The Compressor
The Condenser
Metering Devices
The Evaporator
Charging
A common method for checking or charging is by head
pressure.
Find the units design condenser temperature from the
specifications, add 30 to the outside ambient air temperature
(70 is the outside air temp. add 30, that gives you 100). Take
your P/T chart and see what the pressure crosses up to at 100
using R22.
At 100f R22 equals 198.4 PSI, so you would charge your
system up until you head pressure was close to 198.4.
If
If the unit has a sight glass,
glass check it for bubbles.
bubbles If it does
have bubbles, add more refrigerant slowly until it clears
Always charge refrigerant into the suction line as a vapor. This
is done by keeping your refrigerant cylinder right side up. If
your cylinder is on its side or upside down, you will be
charging
h
i liquid
li id refrigerant
fi
and
d it
i could
ld damage
d
your
compressor.
If you are charging a cap tube system, charging by super
heat is a good method. Check your units specifications and
pick
p
c a des
desired
ed super
supe heat
eat ((10
0 to 16),
6 ), add o
or subt
subtract
act
refrigerant until the super heat is achieved. The superheat is
fixed at 8 to 12 degrees in most residential air conditioning
systems.
Measure Sub-cooling:
Get the refrigerant saturation pressure-temperature. Take a
pressure reading of the liquid line leaving the condenser.
Refrigerant saturation temperature is the pressuretemperature, when the refrigerant is turning from a highpressure vapor into a high-pressure liquid (giving up heat). At
saturation pressure-temperature, both liquid and vapor are at
the same temperature.
(1) Convert pressure to temperature with a P/T chart.
(2) Take a temperature reading at the leaving liquid line of the
condenser.
Compare both, the saturated temperature and leaving liquid
line temperature. Subtracting one from the other, the
difference is the amount the refrigerant has cooled past
saturated temperature.
Measure Evaporator Superheat:
Get a pressure reading of the suction line leaving the
p
to get
g refrigerant
g
saturation pressure-temperature.
p
p
evaporator
Refrigerant saturation temperature is the pressuretemperature, when the refrigerant is turning from a lowpressure liquid to a low-pressure vapor (absorbing heat). At
saturation pressure-temperature, both liquid and vapor are at
the same temperature.
Convert pressure to temperature with a P/T chart.
chart If reading is
obtained at the compressor, not at the evaporator line leaving,
you may have to add a few pounds of pressure due to
pressure drop in the suction line.
Take a temperature reading at the leaving suction line of the
p
evaporator.
Compare both, the saturated temperature and the leaving
suction line temperature. Subtracting one from the other, the
difference is the amount the refrigerant gas has heated past
saturated temperature.