hkstroud
Jan 15, 2016, 06:21 PM
To dsigala
The post that you ask your question was old (4 years old) and locked. You should not have been able to add to that thread but obviously you were. Because it is locked no one can respond to you.
All of the HVAC experts on this site appear to have left the site. Apparently they made enough money and retired to a south sea island.
I am no expert but have paid around with it a little.
In your post you ask,
can it still be overcharged with 0 psi showing on the low side?
but there is frost on the low side line
Yes. The refrigerant expands depending on temperature and pressure. At 18 degrees in freezer the temperature is not preventing the refrigerant from expanding. Therefore it must be pressure. When unexpanded refrigerant hits low side line and higher temperature is can expand and absorb heat. Therefore the frosting of the low side line . That means all of the refrigerant is no expanding in the evaporator coil.
Release a small amount of refrigerant (in increments) until frost line recedes back into evaporator coil. This should reduce low side pressure temporarily. Low side pressure should return to 0 when freezer reaches 10 degrees.
Zero pressure at 18 degrees is not the same as 0 pressure at 10 degrees.
Remember, I am no expert.
The post that you ask your question was old (4 years old) and locked. You should not have been able to add to that thread but obviously you were. Because it is locked no one can respond to you.
All of the HVAC experts on this site appear to have left the site. Apparently they made enough money and retired to a south sea island.
I am no expert but have paid around with it a little.
In your post you ask,
can it still be overcharged with 0 psi showing on the low side?
but there is frost on the low side line
Yes. The refrigerant expands depending on temperature and pressure. At 18 degrees in freezer the temperature is not preventing the refrigerant from expanding. Therefore it must be pressure. When unexpanded refrigerant hits low side line and higher temperature is can expand and absorb heat. Therefore the frosting of the low side line . That means all of the refrigerant is no expanding in the evaporator coil.
Release a small amount of refrigerant (in increments) until frost line recedes back into evaporator coil. This should reduce low side pressure temporarily. Low side pressure should return to 0 when freezer reaches 10 degrees.
Zero pressure at 18 degrees is not the same as 0 pressure at 10 degrees.
Remember, I am no expert.