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
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.
My first question is,, did they/someone do a manual J sizing calculation?
Unless you have a superdooper tight and well insulated home with great tripple insulated doors and windows,, I`m wondering is the 2 ton ac big enough for a 1500 sq. ft house
The sales person had the specs of our old system, asked us some questions about the size of the house and then did manual calculations, using tables from a binder. The old R22 unit was the same size and worked fine, we are in southeastern Ontario so many believe A/C is only necessary from June through September; we run ours from mid May through to October most years.
I know nothing about HVAC and I am wondering what questions I should be asking other that those that stem from HVAC100's statement
First give them some time to figure it all out. The unit was just replaced this week. It would be impossible for me to teach you the HVAC biz by posting on this board and to ask questions you need specific exacting problems to start with. Now with that being said lets start at the beginning.
Did they do a manual J and manual D for your home or did they just guess at the size of unit needed? This is a very important question since many structural items have to be considered in the size selection and the duct work needs to be sized properly for correct air flow.
If they turned the blower up to high it would indicate to me that there is a air flow problem somewhere in the system and it should not be the air cleaner unless the original installer of the air cleaner choked the system duct down for some reason.
I cannot see how a new thermostat and wires are going to cure an air flow problem. The thermostat just tells the unit when to turn off and on in most cases.
If you can take some pictures of the inside unit etc and post them here something may be able to be seen. Naturally it is nice to see a tape measure placed next to the duct so a size can be figured etc.
First give them some time to figure it all out. The unit was just replaced this week. It would be impossible for me to teach you the HVAC biz by posting on this board and to ask questions you need specific exacting problems to start with. Now with that being said lets start at the beginning.
That's where we are currently, I'm also trying to learn what I need to know in order to ask relevant questions.
Did they do a manual J and manual D for your home or did they just guess at the size of unit needed?
I don't know what a manual J or a manual D is; I assumed the salesperson knew what they were doing. The lady we usually dealt with retired; when we replaced the furnace she explained why the unit I was interested in was wrong for our house and sold us one better suited to our needs at half the price. Needless to say she amassed a huge amount of trust due to that, which we also associated with the company.
If they turned the blower up to high it would indicate to me that there is a air flow problem somewhere in the system and it should not be the air cleaner unless the original installer of the air cleaner choked the system duct down for some reason.
During annual maintenance and on the first service call following that, the techs tried to blame it on a pressure drop; but as explained previously, all the equipment came from the same company and the L2B filter was the first piece of equipment installed. Furnace blower and everything else should have been sized with those filters factored in.
Sorry, about the lack of tape measure, I hope you can figure scale from pictures. In the bottom picture the white box at the top left is the UV lamp control for the lamps over the condenser unit in the plenum. As you can see the condenser unit fits in a section of ducting that is the same size as that coming out of the furnace, nothing narrows down until it splits into legs for various parts of the house.
Air comes down through L2B (large white unit next to water heater in the 1st picture) into filter unit on floor between L2B and furnace and then through ductwork.
In the picture on the upper right side it looks like that is where your inside coil is. That is the evaporator coil. The condenser is outside.
Did they replace the inside evaporator coil? It looks like the old one is there with the old lines. In other words did they just replace the outside unit? Answer this question please.
I am still trying to get a clear picture of your setup. That coil just does not look correct. I hate to bother you but take some more pictures.
The duct tape around the holes for the copper lines looks old.
The drain line is not 3/4 PVC pipe but some kind of old vinyl tube.
The sheetmetal looks older in the upper right side picture than it does in the upper left picture.
What is that cream colored box sitting above the coil?
The reason I ask is because (and I hate to say this but that does not look like a professional install) at least from where I come from.
Take some more pictures so I can see more of this. A complete front shot would be good also. Hopefully we can get to the bottom of this.
Post or scan and post exactly what the bill says from the company. (What was the exact work done) AND if the coil was replaced they should have put the coil model number on the bill.
Did they replace the copper line set that connects the inside to the outside section?
That is a Aspen Coil and not a Goodman coil. By the way, the +TDR at the end of that number is not part of the Aspen number. It stands for "plus Time Delay Relay", referring to a timer that makes the blower operate for a short time after the outdoor unit shuts off. A 90 second time delay on the blower adds about .4 SEER to the rating, if there was a rating with that coil.
The warranty from the factory is 10 years if it is a complete Goodman system but not with a Aspen coil??
BTW the outside unit requires a 3/4 OD copper line on the suction side. NOTE the suction line is insulated with 1/2 ID x 3/8 black flex insulation. I wonder how they got the insulation to fit the copper line set ? 1/2 ID = 5/8 OD so the insulation is not large enough for 3/4 OD tube.
So
The coil is not Goodman
We do not know if it has a expansion valve as required
We do not know if the Aspen coil is rated for usage with the Goodman outside unit.
Actually this looks like a amateur junk job in my opinion.
Or it could be the wrong coil/or expansion device/piston or to small/kinked suction line.
IE if they used the R22 expansion piston instead of the R-410A piston etc.
Got to get going the wife had me busy today and Sunday being another busy day. Dang never get any free time.
All I can do here is take educated guess work and post it. Since we are not there it is almost impossible to give a perfect answer in this case. I hope they get it working for you soon.
It's a strange situation; thank-you for helping. Thanks to your involvement I now know some of the right questions to ask them. I had a feeling it was a bad install when one of the techs had a cell phone glued to his ear for an hour or so.
I'm not sure if it's that people are on vacation and I got the B team for installation or if there is some faulty equipment. I do know the sales guy had some difficulty matching the coil, and as you have pointed out they seem to have gone outside of Goodman Mfg. to source it.
I remember in college that the shop supervisor told me that I was an invaluable piece of test gear, in that I invariably reached for the equipment that was on the fritz; computers, meters, gauges, didn't matter, I just gravitated towards it. By the same token, once I calibrated something it was solid. I'm sure that at a remove it's interesting to watch; but up close and personal I can almost guarantee that if it has a cord attached, 3 of 5 new items will need to be returned.
Two crews showed up first thing this morning. Cleaned and recharged the system, put in a thermostat that will accommodate two stage units and put new filters in the L2B. Hot and humid today and the system has kept the house nice and cool; vent temperatures are 50 degrees or lower.
Thank you HVAC1000 for your patience and input. As you suggested, the contractor was willing and able to resolve the issues.
Hello, I hope you are doing well. Please, let me explain the topic of this thread before I get attacked.
As a person living in California, it seems as if many people (not all, of course) who are raised and live in the Southern states of the US are still ignorant when it comes to a variety of...
This is what I like about the South:
Tennessee
The owner of a golf course was confused about paying an
Invoice, so he decided to ask his secretary for some
Mathematical help. He called her into his office and said,
'You graduated from the University of Tennessee and
I need some help. If I...