A/C installation went south.
Our 1500 sq. foot home in southern Ontario was 20 years old when we bought. Right off the bat we put in a whole house L2B air cleaner. A few years later we replaced our old gas furnace with a high efficiency furnace, and just this week replaced the original A/C with an Amana ASX16 system rated at 2 tons. About 3 hours into the install the senior tech started bouncing in and out the door with a cell phone glued to his ear, this lasted about an hour. An hour or so later everything was up and running.
Currently daytime temperatures are running between 28 and 32 degrees Celsius, dropping to 18 - 20 overnight. After about 9:30 in the morning the indoor temperature starts rising till it hits 23 degrees and it will not get lower until midnight. The company sent over some techs who switched the unit into a permanent high setting and they told us a new thermostat and wire were on the way. Same temperature cycle in the meantime.
All the units were sold and installed by a sub-contractor under the same multi-national company so as to forestall one company blaming the work of another. They already tried to explain an earlier A/C problem as pressure drop across the L2B and only backed off after I explained that would indicate faulty design on their part.
I know nothing about HVAC and I am wondering what questions I should be asking other that those that stem from HVAC100's statement
Quote:
When the company does lousy braze jobs, does not use nitrogen gas while brazing, does not vac the system correctly and purge at least one time and then use a digital vac gauge for the final micron reading you are already heading for trouble down the road.
Any suggestions would be welcome. An exceptable range for the micron reading would be especially appreciated.
Thanks in advance;
Dave