Best thing to do would be to contact the mfr for their recommendations on traps etc for such an install.
dertty evaporator coil , low charge ,restriction on any of the line condenser fan diffectedType your answer here...
you can probably get away with that just make sure you have an expansion valve on the evaporator. An expansion valve will keep liquid from getting back to the compressor.
The installation manual will tell you what size lines are acceptable.
To condense
CondenSER is correct. CondenSOR is not a real word. Regards!
The outdoor coil is a condenser in the cooling mode and an evaporator in the heating mode.. (pg. 1077) -MAS
Installing a 3 1/2 ton condenser on a 3 tr evaporator will not function properly. There isn't enough evaporator coil surface area to absorb heat and vaporize refrigerant liquid for its return back to the condenser compressor. What can be done is a 3 ton condenser unit with a 3 1/2 evaporator coil.
Usually a package HVAC or Package unit is one large unit that has the evaporator and condenser in the same location unlike a typical system where the evaporator and condenser are located in separate locations. Package units are usually used for commercial building and placed on rooftops.
The coil that serves the inside of the house is called the indoor coil. The reason is that the indoor coil is a condenser in the heating mode and an evaporator in the cooling mode.. (pg. 1077)
dertty evaporator coil , low charge ,restriction on any of the line condenser fan diffectedType your answer here...
you can probably get away with that just make sure you have an expansion valve on the evaporator. An expansion valve will keep liquid from getting back to the compressor.
A package unit contains all elements of the refrigeration cycle in one system. The 4 major components include: A compressor, condenser, metering device, and a evaporator. All elements are needed to complete the cycle of refrigeration. As for a split unit, All elements of the refrigeration cycle are used, however the condenser is located outside of the facility, while the evaporator is located inside of the facility. To better understand the difference in question, you must understand the job of each component in the refrigeration cycle. For example, a condenser is normally used to reject heat or cold air from a building, while a evaporator normally supplies heat or cold air to the building.
Central unit used with a chiller system or individual units with a evaporator and condenser instead that wall units.
Don't do it unless you are certified , plus buying R22 you need a certification. Check your evaporator filters , wash your condenser coil.
Do you perhaps mean the 'lineset'? If so, it is usually a copper line (actually 2 copper lines) running counter-currently. They connect the indoor evaporator coil (above furnace or air-handler) to the outdoor condenser. One tubing carries the refrigerant gas from the indoor evaporator coil to the outdoor condenser and the other line carries the condensed (liquid) form of this gas back to the evaporator coil for it to be evaporated again and be converted back to gas. This is the refrigeration cycle of an A/C unit.
1.Air Flow 2.Over charged unit 3.Dirty evaporator and condenser coils.4.High amp draw
Highly not recommended. If you found a contractor who would actually do this, run don`t walk away from that guy.