riain43
Jun 13, 2009, 06:59 PM
I bought a house last year, and the AC unit, a Trane XE 1000 Mod no. TTR025C100A2 has not done a very good job of cooling my house. It runs all day and night and doesn't cool the house more than a few degrees on the best of days.
I had a technician come out and look at it and when he pulled the shroud off the outside unit we saw that the coil was caked with years worth of gunk. We cleaned the gunk off and the AC still was not cooling. So we checked the lines going into the indoor coil and the coolant supply line was hot and the return line was cold and sweating. It appears that coolant is moving backwards through the system.
The technician told me that he suspects the filter-dryer broke, which caused the pellets it contains to be flushed into the lines, causing a blockage. He said that the entire system, indoor and outdoor, needs to be replaced and all lines flushed to remove all the blockages from the system. This is obviously a very expensive proposition.
I also have a Honeywell RTH230B electronic thermostat. In the documentation, it clearly states that it is not compatible with heat pumps. It does not have a terminal for the orange (reversing valve) signal wire. I don't know if the Trane unit I have has a heat pump or not; I'm not an HVAC person. If the system had a heat pump and the reversing valve signal was not present, it might explain why the coolant is running backwards.
So my questions are:
- Is the technician correct in his diagnosis?
- Does this model Trane use a heat pump which needs a thermostat that supports it?
- Are there any other factors that could cause the coolant to flow backwards in the lines?
Any help someone could offer in this forum would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
-J.
I had a technician come out and look at it and when he pulled the shroud off the outside unit we saw that the coil was caked with years worth of gunk. We cleaned the gunk off and the AC still was not cooling. So we checked the lines going into the indoor coil and the coolant supply line was hot and the return line was cold and sweating. It appears that coolant is moving backwards through the system.
The technician told me that he suspects the filter-dryer broke, which caused the pellets it contains to be flushed into the lines, causing a blockage. He said that the entire system, indoor and outdoor, needs to be replaced and all lines flushed to remove all the blockages from the system. This is obviously a very expensive proposition.
I also have a Honeywell RTH230B electronic thermostat. In the documentation, it clearly states that it is not compatible with heat pumps. It does not have a terminal for the orange (reversing valve) signal wire. I don't know if the Trane unit I have has a heat pump or not; I'm not an HVAC person. If the system had a heat pump and the reversing valve signal was not present, it might explain why the coolant is running backwards.
So my questions are:
- Is the technician correct in his diagnosis?
- Does this model Trane use a heat pump which needs a thermostat that supports it?
- Are there any other factors that could cause the coolant to flow backwards in the lines?
Any help someone could offer in this forum would be greatly appreciated.
Cheers,
-J.