Thermo Products 30 ユーザーズマニュアル

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All installations and services must be performed by qualified service personnel. 
 
The suction pressure and condenser subcooling are the most significant  
readings. If a unit is suspected of having a low refrigerant charge, the unit should 
be recharged using the suction pressure then topped off using subcooling.  Any 
additional refrigerant may cause damage or unintended problems. 
 
The pressure/temperature chart on the wiring diagram is to serve only as a 
guide.  Pressures shown are realistic averages which will vary somewhat with 
changes in air temperatures, air flowrate across the evaporator and condenser 
coils and humidity – both inside and outside. 
 
If a charge must be added to the system, connect to the suction service port of 
the service valve and add a vapor charge only while the system is operating. 
Addition of liquid refrigerant at the suction port may damage the compressor. 
 
2.  Definition of Subcooling: 
 
Subcooling is extra heat removed from refrigerant below the saturation 
pressure/temperature of the refrigerant. A certain amount of refrigerant 
subcooling is usually beneficial and needed to help assure the best operation of 
the cooling system. Subcooling takes place in the condenser. It is a function of 
the amount of airflow into the condenser, the outside ambient air temperature, 
the refrigerant pressure into the condenser, and pressure drop through the 
condenser. 
 
Refrigerant with low subcooling may partially change back into vapor, or “flash to 
gas”, while flowing to the evaporator.  The resulting gas bubbles can block or 
interrupt flow through refrigerant controls causing the evaporator to “starve” for 
liquid refrigerant. The consequences are poor evaporator efficiency, high 
superheat, and generally poor cooling of the conditioned space. Unless very well-
insulated, long liquid lines from the condenser to the evaporator, specifically 
liquid lines exposed to high ambient temperatures, are prone to reduce 
refrigerant subcooling.  To insure sub-cooled liquid refrigerant reaches the 
evaporator under all conditions, it is usually advisable to take subcooling 
measurements during the warmest part of the day.  Test measurements taken 
during this time would provide results typical of the most adverse conditions 
under which the cooling system would operate. Installing a liquid line sight glass 
at the inlet to the evaporator is a simple, but effective, way to prove liquid is 
feeding the evaporator. If the sight glass shows all liquid flow without bubbles this 
is a good indication that the amount of subcooling is adequate. 
 
NOTICE: Do not attempt a superheat measurement when the ambient 
temperature is less than 60
° F. Low loading on the cooling system will 
result in low or erroneous superheat measurements.  
 
 
  
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