Ok, I have a heat pump that I installed about 1 month ago. It has not been performing properly since installation. By not performing properly, I mean I cant keep the house over 60F even when the outside temps are 15F.
This is an 18,000btu Senville Aura mini split. I am heating one open space of 900sqft. Thermopane windows, R24 in the walls, R40 in the attic.
What I have done so far....
HVAC contractor came and recovered the unit, verified no leaks, and weighed in the label charge (67oz r410a)
- I have checked all the sensors, and all are reading proper resistance.
- I have checked the compressor windings for proper resistance.
- I have verified no bulging capacitors, burn marks or other defects on the circuit boards.
- I have verified proper communication between indoor and outdoor unit.
What I have observed....
This is where things are really making me scratch my head.
Right now, the outdoor temp is 40F and sunny, and indoor temp is 64F.
If I put my heat pump on max temp (86F) and run the indoor fan at HIGH, I get a discharge air temp from the head unit of 95F, and a draw of 6.25 amps.
If I put my heat pump on max temp (86F) and run the indoor fan at LOW, I get a discharge air temp from the head unit of 118F, and a draw of 7.6 amps.
My question is, shouldn't the compressor be ramping up when the indoor fan is on high, and slowing down when it is on low to keep a steady discharge temp?
I am wondering if this could be a TXV issue. I had the heat pump apart and took a look and noticed it does not seem very well insulated to begin with.
I also notice when the fan is on low, and the head unit heats up past a certain amount, there is a very slight whistling from the lineset. Maybe a pinch somewhere?
Can anyone point me in the direction of what the issue might be? I know this is a cheaper unit, but I had a 12,000btu of the same model that heats better than this one, so I cant believe it is just the way it is supposed to perform.
I have a gauge set a detailed service manual if there are any other checks that might help.
A pic of my TXV http://ift.tt/1EOsLom
Spec sheet for the compressor
http://ift.tt/1EOsLoq
http://ift.tt/1EOsJgc
This is an 18,000btu Senville Aura mini split. I am heating one open space of 900sqft. Thermopane windows, R24 in the walls, R40 in the attic.
What I have done so far....
HVAC contractor came and recovered the unit, verified no leaks, and weighed in the label charge (67oz r410a)
- I have checked all the sensors, and all are reading proper resistance.
- I have checked the compressor windings for proper resistance.
- I have verified no bulging capacitors, burn marks or other defects on the circuit boards.
- I have verified proper communication between indoor and outdoor unit.
What I have observed....
This is where things are really making me scratch my head.
Right now, the outdoor temp is 40F and sunny, and indoor temp is 64F.
If I put my heat pump on max temp (86F) and run the indoor fan at HIGH, I get a discharge air temp from the head unit of 95F, and a draw of 6.25 amps.
If I put my heat pump on max temp (86F) and run the indoor fan at LOW, I get a discharge air temp from the head unit of 118F, and a draw of 7.6 amps.
My question is, shouldn't the compressor be ramping up when the indoor fan is on high, and slowing down when it is on low to keep a steady discharge temp?
I am wondering if this could be a TXV issue. I had the heat pump apart and took a look and noticed it does not seem very well insulated to begin with.
I also notice when the fan is on low, and the head unit heats up past a certain amount, there is a very slight whistling from the lineset. Maybe a pinch somewhere?
Can anyone point me in the direction of what the issue might be? I know this is a cheaper unit, but I had a 12,000btu of the same model that heats better than this one, so I cant believe it is just the way it is supposed to perform.
I have a gauge set a detailed service manual if there are any other checks that might help.
A pic of my TXV http://ift.tt/1EOsLom
Spec sheet for the compressor
http://ift.tt/1EOsLoq
http://ift.tt/1EOsJgc
Help with Heat pump diagnostics
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