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Originally Posted by hudoff I live in a condo where we have water cooled 3 ton heat pumps for each unit. We have a large cooling tower on the roof. Our building is 25 years old and about a quarter mile from the beach in Florida.
My A/C shut down yesterday and when I restarted it it did the same after a few minutes. I found the water outlet to the cooling tower very hot. (It is usually about 105 degrees).
I removed the line and flushed the unit to a pail. A lot of what I would call sandy water came out of the heat exchanger. This has happened before. First, can I install a strainer/filter to prevent this? The lines to the A/C are 3/4 inch.
Should the cooling tower have a large filter on the run to the A/C units to prevent this? (The tower is about three years old).
I asked the manager and he thinks it is normal and is some kind of pipe scale...
Let me know what you think.
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they have strainer on the pump, but the hole (1/8 -1/4) is too large to stop the sand, they have smaller strainers for individual condenser.. the water treatment/strainer may be ineffective, yes there is always some scale in the water, but not enough ( it is wrong) to cause the compressor to tripout.. too much scale/bacterial in the water will cause the compressor to consume more power ,$$$