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The indoor coil acts as an evaporator coil for heating.
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)
Next to the indoor coil.
Check for clogged or dirty air flow paths, and clean the evaporator coil. Clean and Treat the condensate pan and clean the condensate drain line. Check for proper operation of the blower.
You don`t size a condensing unit to match your indoor unit. You size it to match the rate at which your house gains heat (heat load). Then you buy a matching indoor evaporator coil and set the fan speed on the indoor unit to deliver the proper cfm to support whatever size condenser the heat load calculation says you needed.
The coils can be cleaned using a coil brush and foaming coil cleaner. These items are available at www.appliancepartspros.com.
yes. Can also be referred to as indoor coil.
That depends on 1) what indoor coil you have, 2) is the ductwork adequate to support 4 tons and 3) if the indoor coil and ductwork are suitable does the blower have the capacity to support 4 tons or 1600 cfm? If so it must be sped up.
There could be many things wrong... 1. Dirty air filter in your furnace. (most common) 2. Low refrigerant level 3. Dirty indoor coil 4. Dirty outdoor coil If the outdoor unit is not running... 5. Tripped breaker for AC 6. Bad contactor 7. Bad capacitor 8. Locked compressor 9. Bad fan motor on AC These are the most common reasons. Hope this helps! Heating & Cooling Contractor near Columbus, Ohio
There are 2 coils. 1 inside the indoor air handler or furnace and 1 outside on your condenser in the yard.
You most likely have one of two things: Indoor air flow. Your system is designed to deliver a certain amount of air flow through your coil. If your filter is extremely dirty, or your inside evaperator coil is dirty, or some of your registers closed. In Florida, you may have a clear fungus in your coil that is not easy to detect without proper knowlege. Also your duct work may not be installed correctly or adequately sized for your system. That possibility is answered by has it ever worked properly? If airflow is not the problem, then the next most likely answer is the refrigerant charge is incorrect.
It is going to be part of the "indoor" evaperator coil. If you know the Brand of the INDOOR COIL and can get the model number you should be able to find a picture of the components on the manufacturers web site or by searching for it on a search engine such as Google or Ask! .com Also you will have a drain line that connects to the outdoors unless it is a window unit.