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Thread: High head pressure no duty
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21-07-2007, 08:51 AM #1
High head pressure no duty
I've been racking my brains on this one all night trying to think about why this is happening.
Remote condensing unit within 25 mtrs of cold store evaporator. Engineer has reported that the head pressure is 325psi on R404a and 40 psi on suction at the moment ambient is 13c and the liquid line is untouchable (to hot). The coldstore is 10 degrees off design temp,(chiller +1c) condenser clean and fans all ok.
Evaporator clean, fans going right way etc, engineer changed valve and orifice no difference, system has never been broke into so no incondensables i hope,we installed it 5 years ago.
Heres the strange thing if we had a partial blockage on the liquid side the system would pump down and go out on LP switch.
Told the engineer too switch off the evap fans to see if the coil would ice over, it appears some of the distributers are blocked and the coil is only frosting at the top and bottom and within 3 mins its pumped down and gone out on LP. But i can't understand the High discharge temps and pressures.
Heres my thoughts tell me what you think?
Yes some distributors are blocked but still getting a little duty out of system?
A restriction in the high pressure side causing the high head pressures.
I have had this problem on a system years ago but at my age the memory recall is not as good as it should be from sniffing R12
I think its just the partial restriction on the evaporator what do you think.
Regards
Lrac
Grumpy men live longer
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21-07-2007, 10:02 AM #2
Re: High head pressure no duty
Restriction on high side, does it have discharge mufflers or oil separators? Kinked line?
Any restriction after the condenser on the liquid line, including a blocked evap, would give low pressures and cool liquid lines. The refrigerant stays in the condenser and liquid line longer, so it loses more sensible heat. Also there's less refrigerent in the suction line feeding the compressor, therefore pressures don't rise in the high side as there's little vapour to add to the discharge side. The discharge temp might increase, but the liquid line wouldn't be hot.
Only other thing I can thing of, is if it has a pump down solenoid, a leak could have occured between the solenoid and compressor, and it's been sucking in air, explaining high discharge pressures and temps and maybe any blockages.
Unless of course someone on site stuffed it up and got incondensibles in there and aren't admiting to it.
So discharge blockage before the condenser or incondensibles are the only thing I can think of.Last edited by paul_h; 21-07-2007 at 10:06 AM.
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21-07-2007, 10:08 AM #3
Re: High head pressure no duty
Last edited by paul_h; 21-07-2007 at 10:11 AM.
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21-07-2007, 11:10 AM #4
Re: High head pressure no duty
Hi Lrac
the last time I seen this it was a fast food joint where the condensing unit was above a false ceiling, basically it is flash gas in the liquid line
One of our engineers rang me, he just could not get the room down in temp, all he had done was changed the compressor, and recharged.
I went down took a look at it, stripped the armafex off the suction cable tied the liquid to the suction, taped the armaflex back over it and ran it up.
Room started to come down. I left the engineer to monitor and it came down in a few hours
The flash gas causes the poor distributor performance, the gas chokes the liquid line to causing the high head, any suction pressure you see is mainly from gas pressure rather than liquid expanding.
Hope this helps.
Kind Regards AndyIf you can't fix it leave it that no one else will:rolleyes:
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21-07-2007, 11:53 AM #5
Re: High head pressure no duty
One or all the condenser fans running backwards, due to duff capacitor, faulty fan speed control, or sparky has been doing some work on site and swaped the phases over on three phase.
325psi should give a condensing temp of about 50C.
Jon
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21-07-2007, 12:41 PM #6
Re: High head pressure no duty
The refrigerant may be having some non condensable gases. Was the system ever topped up.
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21-07-2007, 12:53 PM #7
Re: High head pressure no duty
Unlikely but...
Blocked circuit in condenser? Combined with incorrect TEV setting.
404a @ 40 PSI= -14 deg c sounds like valve isn't feeding properly.
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21-07-2007, 01:33 PM #8
Re: High head pressure no duty
I'm changing camps and voting for non condesibles. Had a leak on a tev, system on pumpdown, lp switch set too low, leaked out some r22, sucked in air and water. System was cycling on hp switch. Was still maintaining temp, customer complained of a burnt smell and though evap fan motor was burning.
Jon
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21-07-2007, 02:07 PM #9
Re: High head pressure no duty
What is the condenser delta-T (air out temp minus air in temp)? High delta-T narrows it down to (or eliminates) an airflow problem.
Last edited by Gary; 21-07-2007 at 02:18 PM.
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21-07-2007, 05:33 PM #10
Re: High head pressure no duty
Originally Posted by LRAC
This sounds like you have hot gas flowing through the liquid line (as in insufficient charge) for some reason.
If the refrigerant charge was weighed in for the correct amount, then the liquid receiver may have lost the seal on the diptube. There may be just enough liquid getting forced out the receiver to provide some cooling, but not enough.
Originally Posted by LRAC
Flash gas stays at a relatively constant temperature.
Noncondensable gases will of course raise the pressure significantly, but they won't drastically increase the liquid lne temperature.
Whatever is causing the hot liquid line is contributing to the problem....If all else fails, ask for help.
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21-07-2007, 08:26 PM #11
Re: High head pressure no duty
I would replace the expansion valve and make sure the bulb is insulated and fastened tightly. Try to regulate the suction pressure. In South Africa we use R404 for low temperature application only. If you running your compressor out of the designed suction parameters e.g. low temp compressor -20°C too -40 °C suction for a long period of time your condenser is designed to handle a set amount of heat to reject. Once the compressor operates out of its suction parameters for a long period of time e.g. 0 °C the compressor will start to over heat and you will have the same effect as a undersized condenser.
Regards
Lyle
Cape Town
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22-07-2007, 01:44 AM #12
Re: High head pressure no duty
Check the condenser. It may be blocked or is undersized.
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22-07-2007, 03:32 AM #13
Re: High head pressure no duty
Is the sight glass clear??
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22-07-2007, 08:24 AM #14
Re: High head pressure no duty
Thanks for all the replies on this post, i will attend site with the engineer on Monday. I have this niggle in the back of my mind that the valve selection might be wrong or we have incondesables?
Always open to further suggestions.
Kind regards
LracGrumpy men live longer
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22-07-2007, 06:31 PM #15
Re: High head pressure no duty
If I had to guess, my money would be on non-condensables. But I would rather know what's wrong than guess what's wrong... and knowing requires more information than you have provided (dT's, TD's, subcooling, superheat, etc).
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23-07-2007, 12:12 AM #16
Re: High head pressure no duty
As ever, Gary's pragmatic approach will be the decider.
I vote "uncondensibles" but there,... I'm not the King!
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