HURRY THE WALK IN FREEZER IS WARM

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HVACR VIDEOS

HVACR VIDEOS

Күн бұрын

Sometimes these walk in freezer calls can really be a bummer, but after it was all done and fixed they are fun to reflect on....
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HVACR VIDEOS
12523 LIMONITE AVE.
440 - 184
MIRA LOMA, CA. 91752
00:00 ASSESSING THE SITUATION
01:15 UH OHH!
03:28 WILL IT RESET?
06:05 123 PLEASE DON'T BLOW UP
07:00 WELL THAT SUCKS
07:46 TRYING TO MAKE THINGS EASIER
09:53 RECOVERY STEPS
19:55 123 PLEASE DON'T BLOW UP....
22:23 IT'S FINALLY COOLING
22:54 COMPRESSOR AUTOPSY
27:00 WTF MOMENT
29:45 IT PAYS TO HAVE A JUNK DRAWER
32:32 SYSTEM VITALS
36:28 CLSOING WORDS

Пікірлер: 351
@zachmudd2335
@zachmudd2335 2 жыл бұрын
You and your videos have rubbed off on me and I want to thank you. My value as a technician has dramatically improved, I am much more thorough, clean, efficient, fewer call backs etc. My job has gotten easier and my work has proven more and more satisfactory within the last 3 years just by watching these videos and applying the little gems of knowledge you give. Never quit man you are a legend.
@HVACRVIDEOS
@HVACRVIDEOS 2 жыл бұрын
Huh? I don't really know what your trying to do here but if it's attention you wanted well you got it.....
@BeezyKing99
@BeezyKing99 2 жыл бұрын
@@HVACRVIDEOS from what I could tell, he's inspired by you doing the big picture diagnosis jobs rather than just be more like "just cut to the chase and tell me what the problem is"
@nietnodig8423
@nietnodig8423 Жыл бұрын
@@HVACRVIDEOS It's called a compliment.
@lautarobarchi3057
@lautarobarchi3057 Жыл бұрын
@@HVACRVIDEOS Why so rude dude,...
@coheedmonstar33
@coheedmonstar33 Жыл бұрын
@@lautarobarchi3057 I believe he is just kidding, trying to sound bashful about the comment
@BradyT918
@BradyT918 Жыл бұрын
Always loved that you don't just fix it and end it. You take the time to do preventative maintenance wherever you can. You organize and clean the work units when others would skip it. And most of all you take the time to answer "why". Why did it fail, what caused it and how to prevent it. That's something that not many seem to do and it's so intriguing and informative.
@jasonjohnsonHVAC
@jasonjohnsonHVAC 2 жыл бұрын
That recip definitely sounded like death in a can. Another big picture repair done correctly. Text book is for labs and is seldom realistic. I really respect your real world approach to things. Always look forward to your videos
@Bryan-Hensley
@Bryan-Hensley 2 жыл бұрын
Just the bypass stuck open
@gregmercil3968
@gregmercil3968 2 жыл бұрын
I highly agree with that statement. After working in the field for roughly a year and a half, I’ve learned (and keep learning as I go) that the textbook “by the book” logic taught in school is a far cry from the reality of what actually goes on in the real world out in the field. The school wasn’t wrong, but there is so freakin much that the school doesn’t (and probably can’t) teach you.
@Mayhemtheone117
@Mayhemtheone117 2 жыл бұрын
"That's a whole other issue"... story of HVAC when you working on one thing and notice something else is not operating correctly. Lol
@GlenS123
@GlenS123 2 жыл бұрын
You were right, T.O.D. is Copelands "Therm-O-Disc", typically trips around 290°F and blows discharge gas on Internal Overload to get it to shut off. Sounded to me it was stuck open when you got it fired up.
@JorgeMorales-gx5it
@JorgeMorales-gx5it 2 жыл бұрын
How would you get that “unstuck” ?
@etherealrose2139
@etherealrose2139 2 жыл бұрын
@@JorgeMorales-gx5it You can't. It's supposed to reset. If you whack it with something you might be able to reset it but if it don't, then the compressor is done. So... "try whacking it real good up on top of the roof." lol
@throttlebottle5906
@throttlebottle5906 2 жыл бұрын
that or the discharge tube is cracked/broken inside the case. either way the game is over for that compressor.
@SovereignTroll
@SovereignTroll 2 жыл бұрын
The pressures would equalize?
@jonjohnson3027
@jonjohnson3027 2 жыл бұрын
Always cheaper to throw out spoiled product and do emergency repairs than do PM, right?
@sivalley
@sivalley 2 жыл бұрын
🤣
@fitybux4664
@fitybux4664 2 жыл бұрын
You just need a line on the invoice: "You could have saved an estimated $$$$ if you did PM instead of this emergency repair." (I guess it's not profitable to reveal such info, lol.)
@NeighborhoodDada
@NeighborhoodDada 2 жыл бұрын
What's a pm?
@pennyjim5671
@pennyjim5671 2 жыл бұрын
@@NeighborhoodDada PM = Preventative Maintainance (I assume)
@kaptaintrips
@kaptaintrips 2 жыл бұрын
@@pennyjim5671 Some companies utilize what is known as PMS contracts. That simply stands for Preventive Maintenance Service. Not the other acronym...
@jacoblewelseam4394
@jacoblewelseam4394 Жыл бұрын
Huge respect for technicians like you. "... I don't want to go out there at 9 o'clock at night but I have to because it's an emergency." & "I'll do what i can while I'm up there, to make the equipment last longer." Society needs more people that take such responsibility and professionalism in their jobs. Not many people think about their HVAC, plumbing, electrics... , let alone the people repairing and installing such systems. But you guys deserve major respect for what you do and how you do it. Thank you. Great work.
@marcelocoelho4107
@marcelocoelho4107 Жыл бұрын
Personally I would argue the other way around, we need less people like him BECAUSE of how shitty society is to the trades in general, they don't remember the HVAC guy or the Plumber until they have an issue, on the other hand the average people value the likes of artists and sportsman a whole lot more even when society could live on without them, would certainly be a lot more boring but compared to not having piped water in your house? Priorities are crearly skewed in the wrong direction.
@derpydog1008
@derpydog1008 2 жыл бұрын
I really like when you tear stuff apart and show what's going on.
@MBond-kv8gc
@MBond-kv8gc Жыл бұрын
It is so cool that he explains everything about compressors and acs in general, he gives us tips and works really hard. Great work!
@jakewhiteley1751
@jakewhiteley1751 Жыл бұрын
This video is 8 months old, so you won't see this comment, but when the produce walk in short cycles at 3:00, your reaction made me laugh harder than I have in a long time. That feeling of "you've got to be kidding me," is so universal.
@HVACRVIDEOS
@HVACRVIDEOS Жыл бұрын
I try to respond to comments even on older videos.... and your observation was correct..... likely I was thinking " great now I've got another problem to deal with"
@martinleska4292
@martinleska4292 2 жыл бұрын
I agree fact the 3 phase piston compressor doesnt matter rotation only when is new. But if it turns 10k hours in one direction it is not good idea change rotation direction because bearings and side of pistons are worn only on specific areas.
@750kv8
@750kv8 Жыл бұрын
Besides, the oil pump may also prefer one direction, for example if there's a spiral 'vane' thing inside the shaft for one.
@benkuxhouse787
@benkuxhouse787 Жыл бұрын
I totally agree. I have seen it where recip Compressors that have been there for a period of time won’t work in the opposite direction to make a nasty noise.
@alouisschafer7212
@alouisschafer7212 Жыл бұрын
@@750kv8 they are all just splash lubricated by that spiral picking up oil? Then all compressors are 100% directional since the spiral is directional and wont pick the oil up If its running backwards.
@750kv8
@750kv8 Жыл бұрын
@@alouisschafer7212 - Yes, in that case they are directional, and the compressor will not get proper lubrication if it's spinning in the wrong direction. In some old fridge compressors there's no spiral vane inside the hollow shaft, only a small pressed in metal cap or funnel etc. at the bottom end, with a hole in its center, so they can work in either direction. It is only partly a splash lubrication. There are lubricanting holes on the main and excentric shaft for the slip bearings, so the oiling is more direct in those points.
@brandonbaker5884
@brandonbaker5884 2 жыл бұрын
I've been watching for a year and not in the field. Your teaching, communication skills are excellent and engaging which is why I keep coming back.
@Dannzenful
@Dannzenful 2 жыл бұрын
Why am i watching this video? What a KZbin rabbit hole? As a side note my dad was a refrigeration technician for yearsss, he died last year... Somehow reminded my of my childhood... Running around restaurants where he did the same work... Going the same logical way, finding the same root problems. Thanks for the closing words
@AndrewBresciano
@AndrewBresciano 2 жыл бұрын
I know absolutely nothing about commercial AC units. I work in the I.T. field but for some reason your videos came up on my feed and are incredibly interesting. Your quality of work, depth of knowledge and cool tools have me watching many of your videos.
@loganmmordh
@loganmmordh Жыл бұрын
Absolutely the best channel to watch if you work in commercial AC and refrigeration. Recently moved from residential and I watch this guy a lot because he shows you how to troubleshoot.
@HVACRVIDEOS
@HVACRVIDEOS Жыл бұрын
Thanks bud
@ericjackson7810
@ericjackson7810 9 ай бұрын
I am super proud that you take so much pride in your work and your company that you go above and beyond to make it easier for yourself and your customers. Others would just say " its their problem when it breaks" i will come out again and earn more money from these idiot customers.
@paulcrandall2534
@paulcrandall2534 2 жыл бұрын
I would've probably put in all new refrigerant in that system. Being that low with a potential leak like that, the refrigerant will be fractionated and the blend that is left in the receiver may not have the correct ratio of refrigerants in it. I know refrigerant is expensive and it will usually work just fine if you put the recovered refrigerant back in, I just wouldn't want to chance it with a new compressor in the system. I've had it bite me in the ass before. I wouldn't feel comfortable putting in back in unless I took it over to United (or whatever wholesaler you have) and have them analyze it first. Just nit-picking with a little constructive criticism. Great job on the repair. Love the videos. Keep it up.
@smoover
@smoover 2 жыл бұрын
Agree. Would NEVER reuse refrigerant pulled from a failed compressor. Then seeing when it was tore apart…no way. Refrigerant is cheap compared to another failed compressor. My money…knowing most techs are clueless..I’m sure another company had been there and pulled out gas due to high head pressure measured. Can never verify pressures with a stopped up condenser. Great video bro! Fellow tech/owner I know the struggles. Nobody is doing PMs. 🤦🏻‍♂️
@waffalobill
@waffalobill Жыл бұрын
Love watching guys who go above and beyond. I'd work for free just to learn. I have seen so many techs half ass cooler/freezer repair. You go over the top bro.
@robertpage2023
@robertpage2023 Жыл бұрын
You're like the "Quincy, M.E." of HVAC doctors. I like your post mortems on the broken devices. Also, you have what many lack in the way being so conscientious about your work. It's like watching one of those Sherlock Holmes shows where Sherlock just by observation can tell you everything about a person/situation etc. Great SHOW!!
@dashcamandy2242
@dashcamandy2242 2 жыл бұрын
2:50 - I actually jumped when that unit first came on, it was right about the time you put the meter's lead on the compressor connector.
@chaseherigstad8576
@chaseherigstad8576 7 ай бұрын
Chris man, I love your critical thinking. Even without the videos our trade would be so much farther ahead with many more successful techs if a guy/girl had you as their mentor. You really do care about your craft. It’s not in and out; now it’s running who cares. You always follow up and search for cause of failure. Equipment actually has a chance of survival when you get your hands on it.
@dingdongdaddy589
@dingdongdaddy589 2 жыл бұрын
This randomly popped up and I clicked it. I work on semiconductor equipment- it’s always neat to see different fields get into some troubleshooting. Pretty cool, thanks.
@CajunReaper95
@CajunReaper95 7 ай бұрын
The way you panned over to the other unit kicking on and off said that’s a whole another problem made me bust out laughing and I lost it when you said what the heck was that about. 😂😂😂
@Theoldchum
@Theoldchum 2 жыл бұрын
Could hear the internal head pressure bypass relief valve stuck in the open position on that overheated compressor. Sometimes a couple of hard blows with a hammer can get it unstuck.
@olasoderlund2973
@olasoderlund2973 Жыл бұрын
I really like that you dissasemble everything and show how it looks. Really gives a deeper understanding how stuff works
@timparsons7348
@timparsons7348 2 жыл бұрын
All I can say is Wow! First thing.....the breakdown of you taking apart the failed components is beyond awesome! A little about me......I have been doing this trade for 39 years. I have been called an expert in my field and I started and ran my own business in the Chicago area for 20 years. I am currently a technician and a consultant. I am going to direct people to your youtube channel. Great job I am going to point out the obvious. If the equipment was maintained and the customer would have listened to recommendations, you would have never been there doing this. With that said, I cannot stress that a high quality PM including pressure washing is imperative. You are doing what I started doing a few years back on this youtube channel, but a divorce and losing my business took the front seat while I was being undermined and terminated employee(s) took my customers while I was distracted.......thats another story in this insane industry. Regardless........GREAT JOB, keep it up. we need more people like you in this industry. Thank you for the insight. I will share your videos when I need to make a point....like how important a PM is on customers equipment.
@stefanpariyski3709
@stefanpariyski3709 Жыл бұрын
3:08 "That's a whole another problem" LOL The moment you realize you will spend the next 6 hours at that location...
@justinperry68
@justinperry68 2 жыл бұрын
I’ve left the coil off and used a magnet, powered unit, what a mess, it melted inside a black mess, couldn’t charge for replacement, live and learn, don’t rush
@bustedknuckles6051
@bustedknuckles6051 Жыл бұрын
Same! Now I put a screwdriver or something through them every time I pull one off. A 11-1 normally fits perfect.
@stephenbullock-yn3vh
@stephenbullock-yn3vh Жыл бұрын
Great job and excellent information. Your the man.
@m.koehler7716
@m.koehler7716 2 жыл бұрын
I love the squirrel moment when the other system was short cycling. “Ugh stuff”
@bernellhessiii4896
@bernellhessiii4896 Жыл бұрын
Man when I heard that other unit cycling on and off I had the same feeling lol
@KurtM558
@KurtM558 2 жыл бұрын
I love the videos, and it helps give a service perspective into some of the equipment I design. I wish we had more service techs like you.
@produKtNZ
@produKtNZ Жыл бұрын
I would pay for a plane-ticket just to learn under him!
@etherealrose2139
@etherealrose2139 2 жыл бұрын
Haven't watched in a while. This felt like one of your old videos. More to the point, more hands on, less after talk because you covered it at the repair site. Even did autopsy on compressor and looked at contacts. Great depth to the video. This is the good stuff that had people watching before. not 5 minutes of repair and 40 minutes of after talk. Wish you could have pulled the rotor to check the bearings but I don't think it mattered at that point. Would have been fun to see. I've left shop towels wadded up and hanging out of refrigerant lines, briefly, even though it's dry just to prevent any air flow and possible moisture contamination. Yeah, probably won't but it's dry and doesn't leave fibers and I can quickly stuff a piece and yank it out before brazing. Made me wonder about silicon caps but I mean how often does that even happen anyways. You usually swap right there.
@timurszynkiewicz4742
@timurszynkiewicz4742 Жыл бұрын
Lol.... Story of my life. I went from technician to garbage man. I totally enjoyed your video , nice to see good diagnostic procedures in action.
@kylewells6871
@kylewells6871 Жыл бұрын
Man, you are a BADASS service tech. I wanna be like you bro. 👍
@alexanderreyes6546
@alexanderreyes6546 4 ай бұрын
Thank you for sharing learned a lot every time brother God bless you always
@seanae86
@seanae86 Жыл бұрын
I really respect your patience, working diligently troubleshooting, doing a thorough inspection in the entire process. Working for a contractor, I have them on me constantly wanting to know when I’m going to get it fix. Pressure is on I had to tell them more than a few times to back off this process takes time. I don’t want to come back because I over looked something that I had the chance to. Really good diagnosis.
@nicholasthouin5085
@nicholasthouin5085 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks for all these videos .. watching from up North in Canada and I totally get your point on big restaurant chains vs PM’s ont the equipment! Cheers !!
@jasonreinhardt1697
@jasonreinhardt1697 2 жыл бұрын
Sounds like the internal high discharge pressure bypass got stuck open. Had that happen to me when the condenser fan motor went out and the compressor kept running and bypassing. It never reset and had to replace the compressor.
@Bryan-Hensley
@Bryan-Hensley 2 жыл бұрын
Did you whack it will a rubber hammer or a piece of wood? Sometimes they'll reset
@user-me5wj4cm2j
@user-me5wj4cm2j Жыл бұрын
Hi. I'd reccomend you to use closed contactors, so dust and sand couldn't affect contacts. Also you can pay attention that contactors may have a really big difference in materials of contacts. It have big inpact in lifespan of contactor. Also you can install three phase control relay after contactor and use it's built-in relay like a safety switch for entire system. I don't remember if you have such relays in US, but in europe we get a lot of them. But we have a 400volts of voltage between each of 3phases and i don't remember any of 3P voltage control relays which can be manually set to control such a low voltage as 200-220v. We got such voltage only betwen P and N conductors, so if we got 240v between 2 phases that's mean there's something bad happened with one phase. Advantage of this relay- you can choose (and manually tune it) a timered switch on. I remember one case... I metred 920volts between two phases (normally 400v +/-10%) and all three-phase equipment are already dead. Customer's choose to use one phased equipment only... Bravo!!! And of course there's a solid states relays on the market. Why still using old fashioned defrost timing relay? Why not using controller such as eliwell 974?
@mab241
@mab241 2 жыл бұрын
Love the videos been watching for about a year now. Trying to get into the field. I have zero experience but talked to a company they're willing to take me on. Excited to hopefully get into the field !
@SovereignTroll
@SovereignTroll 2 жыл бұрын
The most-important part to me is VRF VAF and the inverter troubleshooting as this is future due to energy requirements. HVACR has some very nice intros and field example calls.
@kaptaintrips
@kaptaintrips 2 жыл бұрын
VRF will be seen as a flash in the pan after another decade or so. Much better to put the money upfront for a chiller, vavs or other new tech than that garbage. Perhaps I will be wrong but var refer flow is the old way of spending less now and paying a LOT later.
@SovereignTroll
@SovereignTroll 2 жыл бұрын
@@kaptaintrips Cost is not a concern, energy consumption and GWP of each refrigerant is. VRF and VAF are inevitable and as electricity triples $$$ in 10 years these will be more-attractive.
@kaptaintrips
@kaptaintrips 2 жыл бұрын
@@SovereignTroll Think you're right about how things will go in the near future but it still doesn't seem to me like the right choice for long term energy management. I suppose Im just an old guy that doesn't really see the viability of vrf right now. I do hope it gets better and more reliable but by then I sure better be retired leaning about it vicariously.
@SovereignTroll
@SovereignTroll 2 жыл бұрын
@@kaptaintrips I am 64. However was retired Chemist before HVAC in a lab so we designed and tested refrigerants. Inverter tech was speciality. For all techs, educate yourself in inverter, pulse and frequency-shaping tech. Not only for HVAC, but you also can work with solar and power storage tech. $$$$ for demand!
@bluecollardownunder3616
@bluecollardownunder3616 8 ай бұрын
I think it's a good practice that every time you change compressor you must change the contactor, relay and capacitor too.
@JuanTodoli
@JuanTodoli 2 жыл бұрын
Excellent tear-down. Thanks for this one Chris.
@ImTheDudeMan471
@ImTheDudeMan471 Жыл бұрын
Nebraska winter, 5 deg. F outside, parka on. Sale on beer, walk into the liquor section of grocery store and the walk-in 35 deg. F cooler, saying, "Ooooo nice and toasty warm in here".
@MariosACandRefrigeration
@MariosACandRefrigeration 2 жыл бұрын
to make sure you check relief pressure,connect high side before the drier,it could have been plugged.but most likely compressor was bad.thanks for sharing great crew.
@wendellsmith1964
@wendellsmith1964 2 жыл бұрын
Very interesting videos, I'm don't anything about HVACs but I enjoy the videos. Thanks for posting.
@zachmiller821
@zachmiller821 Жыл бұрын
Thanks for making these vids!! They really help me learn
@ryanmarlatt5726
@ryanmarlatt5726 8 ай бұрын
Great video. Valves should come very close to your adjustment of superheat from the factory. Quarter turn meaning about 1 degree of superheat change. 8 degrees seems way out unless the txv does multiple tonnage coils
@dm5181
@dm5181 Жыл бұрын
Wow man I really liked this video. I for sure wished I was an apprentice working under you cause I learned a lot just in this 40 min video. Keep it up man and keep bringing in those videos!! They are 🔥
@mikec.2746
@mikec.2746 2 жыл бұрын
I see you checked for power at the compressor terminals. Little story for you. I had a tech years ago do the same thing but on a Trane unit. The unit was installed 2 feet off the roof wall. He was a larger guy and squeezed in. With the electrical cover off the compressor he check for power at the terminals. Just then the compressor went to ground, the terminals blew out, and hot gas scorched his chest. He couldn't get out of the way and suffered 3rd degree burns on his chest and arms. OSHA crawled up my butt and fined me to boot. No one in my company is allowed to check for voltage at the compressor. PERIOD. Good video by the way, other than that.
@Bmw2473
@Bmw2473 Жыл бұрын
Cool stuff, I never knew how much goes into these things. My company bought a old McDonald’s meat factory and it was all refrigerated and had ton of these units to keep it all frozen. Just ripped a bunch out to clean up the ceiling of junk so we didn’t hit it with the fork lift. We now print labels in there.
@DanielHernandez-tp2tm
@DanielHernandez-tp2tm 2 жыл бұрын
I was always taught to replace the contactor with the compressor. I like the videos, keep up the good work.
@Bryan-Hensley
@Bryan-Hensley 2 жыл бұрын
And the capacitor. And the dryer
@DanielHernandez-tp2tm
@DanielHernandez-tp2tm 2 жыл бұрын
@@Bryan-Hensley and the txv just to be super safe.
@Viewsandvibrations
@Viewsandvibrations Жыл бұрын
Unless the customer wants you to be proactive on repairs you shouldnt quote anything that isn’t actually broken/dysfunctional.
@Bryan-Hensley
@Bryan-Hensley Жыл бұрын
If you don't replace a 3 pole contactor and one pole loses connection it can kill the compressor.. even if it's just been a few hours since you replaced it..
@Viewsandvibrations
@Viewsandvibrations Жыл бұрын
@@Bryan-Hensley that hasnt been my experience and ive replaced a fair amount of compressors . I dont replace the contactor but i will replace the filter drier and the cap depending on the condition. We do pms every 3 months they haven’t gone bad yet
@stephenvale2624
@stephenvale2624 Жыл бұрын
Amazing how much I am learning about big air con systems. Quite fascinating! Really!
@vincentramirez8303
@vincentramirez8303 2 жыл бұрын
Chris your tech videos are the tops..you keep it up we'll keep watching!
@zack9912000
@zack9912000 2 жыл бұрын
Your videos help me get back into commercial work
@thesilentonevictor
@thesilentonevictor 2 жыл бұрын
Great job Chris from start to finish hvacr at its best 👌
@francoquiroga3122
@francoquiroga3122 2 жыл бұрын
Hola te escribo desde Argentina (Córdoba)...Sos un gran profesional y sigo tus videos, soy un fanatico de tus videos, seguí así.Aprendemos mucho de vos y estoy muy agradecido ! Que tengas salud y mucha vida.Fuerte abrazo a la distancia !!!.-
@philhall5609
@philhall5609 Жыл бұрын
Great video!!!!! Great work ethic!!!!! You know your stuff!! Thanks for sharing!!
@GiuseppePennisi-wu6yu
@GiuseppePennisi-wu6yu 4 ай бұрын
Nice video. I can only imagine that the bills must be very high on this repair. Three guys and two our travel each way. That would give most small restaurant owners a heart attack. We charge 125.00 a hour and our customers always want a price before we work on anything. Having the second day working on the defrost and other issues is a lot of extra time . This could cost a refrigeration contractor money if he gave a bid with out knowing that the unit had a defrost problem and evaporator fan motor issue.
@patrick12399
@patrick12399 2 жыл бұрын
The compressor sounded like "kill me immediately"
@sirgecko666
@sirgecko666 Жыл бұрын
Oh man, I didn't know how cool cooling systems are. Thanks KZbin for showing me this channel 😅 Nice how you explain things - normally I am on the side in a restaurant that calls you to fix the machines 🤗
@garrysalis4312
@garrysalis4312 Жыл бұрын
Watching from Australia, Very thorough repair, I have just retired after 45 years in the game of refrigeration and air conditioning. Always changed contacters, relays, capacitors, overloads on every compressor change. Did you consider a burnout dryer on the suction line? Great video. Great work.
@HVACRSurvival
@HVACRSurvival 2 жыл бұрын
Very thorough diagnostic 👍👍
@hyd119
@hyd119 Жыл бұрын
This is satisfying to watch in the cool 62 degrees of this room. Almost therapeutic. Thanks for the lugging all that camera equipment around. The videos are cool and informative. Hope you wear sunscreen.
@spacemanwithraygun3933
@spacemanwithraygun3933 17 күн бұрын
Those caps pop when the valve is bad. Sometimes working the valve down then back open with a new cap will fix it.
@josegabrielascanio1177
@josegabrielascanio1177 Жыл бұрын
You are right ,this type of business always wait until the system is giving them problems .and most of the time the result is that something is broken due a lack o maintinance. Like your videos ,i watch them from Venezuela.
@peterpisaglu6862
@peterpisaglu6862 Жыл бұрын
Nice troubleshooting/maintenance/repairs videos of cooling systems. All the Best to You.! :)
@genericname6122
@genericname6122 7 ай бұрын
Super helpful!!!!
@tbelding
@tbelding 2 жыл бұрын
Refurbishing a few contactors to keep as emergency spares makes sense to me, but it also makes perfect sense to replace with new equipment when you're replacing the core of the system - the compressor. For that matter, keeping a few _compressors_ around when replacing older systems makes sense. (When you've replaced a compressor, then replaced the whole unit six months later. Replace the oil, pump down lightly to remove moisture, then seal)
@bill8by5
@bill8by5 Жыл бұрын
Steve Lavimoniere in Massachusetts records every job he does. He explains that it's his documenting everything he discovers, his methodology in pursuing the root problem and everything else which may effect the system, and all that he did to perform his repairs. I've watched your videos and enjoy every aspect of what you do - great job, keep 'em coming. Those "switches" you might be looking for are actually thermistors. Thermistors are available for various temperature ranges from places other than AC parts houses. I believe you might be able to find them elsewhere - maybe.
@pedrojardim1163
@pedrojardim1163 2 жыл бұрын
Thanks Chris its always very very informative videos keep coming 👍
@Jdrichardson35christ
@Jdrichardson35christ 2 жыл бұрын
Very good Job 👍 the kind of tech someone would be privileged to learn from
@Seven_Leaf
@Seven_Leaf Жыл бұрын
I remember having endless problems when I worked at a place with one here in Florida. We're by a lot of different water sources so we hardly get out of the 90s but all that water and humidity keeps the temp high well into the night. Right now it's 85*F at 11:30pm and I'd consider that cool for a late August night.
@jcjpjvcd
@jcjpjvcd Жыл бұрын
I'm an apprentice on refrigeration but I have been doing residential and commercial air condition for years would like to learn refrigeration and your videos are very instructing
@yassergutierrez5490
@yassergutierrez5490 Жыл бұрын
Love your videos
@robgraham1204
@robgraham1204 2 жыл бұрын
This is why we don't fit auto reset hp switches When condensers get plugged or fan packs up You don't then have compressors failing Customer pays for a call out and the works to fix the discharge issue not paying out for a new compressor
@serezhka2943
@serezhka2943 2 жыл бұрын
Thank you!
@johnwalker890
@johnwalker890 2 жыл бұрын
Good job Chris.
@evercanales448
@evercanales448 Жыл бұрын
Great video thank you dude
@westreadwell9675
@westreadwell9675 2 жыл бұрын
Love your show!
@metaxa715
@metaxa715 2 жыл бұрын
keep up the good work man ! you don't even know how any people i told about your chanel ! great education !
@damiangul9384
@damiangul9384 2 жыл бұрын
I just wanna say your my favorite technician.
@vandenboschtechniek
@vandenboschtechniek 2 жыл бұрын
Great video again, thnx 💪
@JaedenHudson
@JaedenHudson 2 жыл бұрын
Did you ever end up looking at that other unit that was cycling on and off? I thought that was an interesting one
@fitybux4664
@fitybux4664 2 жыл бұрын
Maybe the system was actually overfilled with coolant? LOL. High pressure tripping, system cools down, turns back on, rinse repeat? (Just a guess.) It seems like someone didn't know what they were doing with coolant maybe? Possibly an armchair AC repairman? (An enthusiastic employee or manager? Heh...)
@Heribertozagada
@Heribertozagada 7 ай бұрын
Thanks for sharing your video I'm very much interested
@garybrown37
@garybrown37 3 ай бұрын
We always use ice to cool the case
@tobyoverton_hvacr
@tobyoverton_hvacr 2 жыл бұрын
Makes me so happy to see compressors cut open and properly diagnosed. Good on ya bud
@fitybux4664
@fitybux4664 2 жыл бұрын
It did make me wonder, could it be welded back shut by someone less fortunate? Hah. (Are compressors ever rebuilt with success?)
@tobyoverton_hvacr
@tobyoverton_hvacr 2 жыл бұрын
@@fitybux4664 I heard stories of refrigeration mechanics in Cuba during the Cold War not being able to get replacement hermetic compressors as most of them were made in America so they would cut them open, fashion up some replacement parts locally, repair the compressors and then weld them back together.
@xzearr
@xzearr 2 жыл бұрын
I did that screwdriver trick, and burned a solenoid. its not a good trick to do while you recover, its only worth doing if youre doing a quick check on the valve. The solenoids are really sensitive :O
@wickett7078
@wickett7078 2 жыл бұрын
Well he did say help, not prevent entirely lol
@smoover
@smoover 2 жыл бұрын
All you need to do…pull one side of coil power off of contractor…turn disconnect on and solenoid will be powered and evaporator coil open. Obviously compressor would not run. No burned up solenoids. 😎
@wickett7078
@wickett7078 2 жыл бұрын
@@smoover yeah or just use the magnets and unwire the coil if that's easier also
@xzearr
@xzearr 2 жыл бұрын
@@smoover ay ay captain! Thats what ive been doing. This were a rookie mistake 5years ago
@hunterhouston1928
@hunterhouston1928 Жыл бұрын
As a new hvac/R business owner. Very nice video.
@justo681
@justo681 2 жыл бұрын
I’m an IT guy but both fields of work are so similar…something broke, get called to a job. Has anything changed? Anything look out of place? Do an initial diagnosis based more so on prior experience. Find the main issue but fix big picture things at the same time to save time and money down the track (and hope the customer is on the same page!) Love watching all your videos keep up the great work 🇦🇺
@bphc1969
@bphc1969 2 жыл бұрын
Another amazing video boss…
@glenjones4404
@glenjones4404 15 күн бұрын
I think all refrigeration condensing units should anti short cycle timer put in when the system is on a pump down and auto reset head pressure switches 💯
@kaptaintrips
@kaptaintrips 2 жыл бұрын
Yes, sir I would love some delicious sorbet for desert and my wife will have the ice cream with extra frost burn. Thank you!
@roqueherrera2692
@roqueherrera2692 Жыл бұрын
This are amazing and very educational videos definitely changing my ways of approaching equipment since I, been doing residential and light commercial installs and now jumping into refrigeration. Thank u again a fan fo eva. Can anyone call u for tech support? 😃
@gregmercil3968
@gregmercil3968 2 жыл бұрын
This reminds me, I still have a blower motor and condenser fan motor sitting in my garage that I need to take apart to see what went wrong with them. 😀
@noeljunco
@noeljunco 2 жыл бұрын
Just ran across this on a wine unit/cabinet for a homeowner (thermal overload)... luckily they replaced the whole outdoor unit...these videos have taught me a lot but still have questions about your methods...I work in the Coachella Valley so any tips would be appreciated!!
@matthewcurry3565
@matthewcurry3565 Жыл бұрын
How do you know so much with how different units can be? Always impresses me when fields like this and automotive can look at "a car" , or "a unit" and know what to even do. Like cars it seems these all have similar parts yet at the same time are absolutely different which forces the "insert job tittle here" to understand thousands of different little pieces, and parts which are only for certain models, years etc. Baffles my mind.
@lammaking333
@lammaking333 2 жыл бұрын
Fantastic walkthrough, you are knowledgeable and skilled tradesman that I can tell cares about his craft. Also your video resolution quality is fantastic. Do you film with a go-pro?
@HVACRVIDEOS
@HVACRVIDEOS 2 жыл бұрын
No I film with my phone in 4k I use the Samsung S22 phones
@thepoopsoup
@thepoopsoup 2 жыл бұрын
No one puts back the freon from a burned out compressor
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