A/C Compressor Out- Real Surprise

The phaseout of 134a infuriates me. ODP (Ozone Depletion
Potential) is ZERO. I still question GWP numbers and usage.
ETA:
I've never heard of any cent chillers using R134a. Thought its
operating pressures are too high.

The real reason as I've heard is 134a went off patent and DuPont is kinda greedy.
 
Just had new two-ton compressor and evaporator installed.

$7200.
 
Thinking about it now, all our newer chillers in the schools were 134A. There aren't any R11 units left for sure. All our newer coolers & freezers and the Central Food Service coolers & freezers are 404A. I have no idea what they did with the computer room. It had 7 dual circuit Liebert units all running on R22. And I don't care anymore!!
 
I am on my third heat pump. The first was a Trane that worked great once it was wired correctly by a second repair company but it always froze up when temps got below 35. The second was a Trane with the new freon and a POC. It broke down twice a year. Replaced inside coil three times, inside motor three times, outside motor twice. Fittings made in china kept exploding due to the new pressures. Finally replaced it with a new unit not a Trane. It doesn't freeze up even at 25 degrees, blows 90 degree heat at 15 amps. The heat pump is finally perfected.
 
I am on my third heat pump. The first was a Trane that worked great once it was wired correctly by a second repair company but it always froze up when temps got below 35. The second was a Trane with the new freon and a POC. It broke down twice a year. Replaced inside coil three times, inside motor three times, outside motor twice. Fittings made in china kept exploding due to the new pressures. Finally replaced it with a new unit not a Trane. It doesn't freeze up even at 25 degrees, blows 90 degree heat at 15 amps. The heat pump is finally perfected.

All heat pumps will freeze up. That's why they go through a defrost cycle. Also they're not designed to work below about 45 degrees. That's when an ambient thermostat is supposed to shut it off and switch to gas/oil/electric strips.
 
I am on my third heat pump. The first was a Trane that worked great once it was wired correctly by a second repair company but it always froze up when temps got below 35.

I've made quite a bit of money over the years following up
on atrocious heat pump installations. It seems that almost no
one knows how to install/maintain heat pumps.
No one knows how to install second stage heat.
No one knows how to correctly program a heat pump
thermostat.
 
What's a heat pump? 🤣🤣🤣

l4lZjQd.jpg
 
All heat pumps will freeze up. That's why they go through a defrost cycle. Also they're not designed to work below about 45 degrees. That's when an ambient thermostat is supposed to shut it off and switch to gas/oil/electric strips.

Any coil running below 30F will freeze up if outside humidity is
high enough.
Not working below 40-45F ambient is a function of refrigerant
characteristics. We can make units that will heat down to -10F
but they will lose serious efficiency when trying to cool at 95F.
That's why heat pumps are a bad investment at northern
latitudes.
 
I've made quite a bit of money over the years following up
on atrocious heat pump installations. It seems that almost no
one knows how to install/maintain heat pumps.
No one knows how to install second stage heat.
No one knows how to correctly program a heat pump
thermostat.
I've heard this quite a lot. The old adage "it's hard to get good help these days" applies with these (supposedly) new-fangled technologies, esp. as there is so much pressure/hype to install them. They're eager to sell, but less able to service and install.

I had that problem with the high-eff. boiler when I built my current house 15 years ago. The installers hadn't a clue what they were doing. It worked, but not properly.

If I were to move and updated building codes mandated a heat pump, I'd be asking some rather pointed questions about the qualifications of the installers, like, "I want to see your factory qualification certificate." I'd probably go with Mitsubishi, Fujitsu or Daikin as these seem to be the best residential products. And I probably wouldn't use it for cooling in summer, but put in an earth tube as I did here. I've even heard of integrating an earth tube with a heat pump for winter use to temper (warm) the air around the pump amd keep it above 40º or so.
 
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