Defrost Control Boards (Heat Pump Wiring Basics)

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  • čas přidán 30. 06. 2024
  • Universal wiring principles of defrost control boards in heat pump systems.

Komentáře • 55

  • @paramountHVAC
    @paramountHVAC Před 5 měsíci +4

    Great explanation, now everything makes sense after 2 years of being in the field

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 5 měsíci

      Perfect. Love hearing that.

    • @The1realro
      @The1realro Před 4 měsíci

      Isn’t even crazy how we can go so long without knowing something fully lol.

  • @user-yf5sg9eg1i
    @user-yf5sg9eg1i Před měsícem +1

    Great videos brother!!

  • @larryprice6321
    @larryprice6321 Před 3 měsíci

    Thanks I'm just starting on my a.c journey this is very very helpful for school starts

  • @teklesenbetgebreamlak7365
    @teklesenbetgebreamlak7365 Před 3 měsíci +1

    Incredible knowledge, such brief explanation how heat pump operation works thanks alot

  • @atleasttry9781
    @atleasttry9781 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Thanks for sharing your knowledge Mike.

  • @The1JBanks
    @The1JBanks Před 5 měsíci +1

    Thank you sir!!! I mainly work on straight AC and needed this.

  • @Eddy63
    @Eddy63 Před 8 měsíci +2

    Well presented J M ... Thx for your time

  • @toolemanful
    @toolemanful Před 8 měsíci +2

    Thank you these videos help me more as a tech

  • @Habibthehvacguy
    @Habibthehvacguy Před 3 měsíci

    Best video training thanks man

  • @chanseongfoong
    @chanseongfoong Před 8 měsíci +2

    Wow! THANK YOU!!!!!

  • @troyfishing4496
    @troyfishing4496 Před 5 měsíci

    Hi Mike,
    Your videos are really helpful for what I try to install.
    When I renovated my house last year, I installed floor heating(only pvc pipe), but not connected with water heater.
    In order to complete it, I just need thermostat, defrost control board, hot water recirculation pump, 24v/120v relay and 120/24v xfmr.
    Then, R, C, Y connection, right?
    It just needs water pump on/off based on temperature setting.
    Is there any simple kit for this system?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 5 měsíci

      Honestly, I'm not familiar with a hot water heater defrost control board radiant heating arrangement to advise on this one.

  • @ernestodiaz76
    @ernestodiaz76 Před 8 měsíci +1

    Thanks

  • @ananddesai1826
    @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

    I liked the explanation.
    I have a question.
    I have a trane unit and every time I turn the heat on even when outside temp is 50 and I raise my house temp from 68 to 69 just one degree the aux heat comes on

    • @The1realro
      @The1realro Před měsícem

      Is AUX heat the only heating you have or a secondary heat?

  •  Před 5 měsíci

    thnk U for the info here. But i have a question. What voltage is on the C terminal, if the R terminal has 24v.?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 5 měsíci

      The common just completes any 24v circuit to allow voltage to flow. It shouldn't read anything by itself.

  • @life.b.s
    @life.b.s Před 6 měsíci

    Hey Mike - I'm trying to trace out a low voltage short on my heat pump/hvac system that's blowing my 5amp fuse intermittently and I found that on the Defrost Control Board, I find continuity between Y and O - and I'm unsure if that's normal? Same for R and C. In additional, Y and O also has continuity to Ground. Power to all units were off while I was testing for continuity to find a wire that was contacting ground.

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 6 měsíci

      Neither Y or O should have continuity to ground or each other. Kind of sounds like the two wires are pinched somewhere and contacting metal. First place I would check is right where the T-stat wire first enters into the condensing unit, or same spot up by the air handler.

    • @life.b.s
      @life.b.s Před 6 měsíci

      @@JerseyMikeHVAC Thanks for the quick reply Mike - the continuity between O ad Y happens at the terminal on the Defrost Control Board itself(I disconnected the T-stat wires and tested the prongs on the board and found the continuity) - so I can't tell if the board is bad in this case - however the system still runs just fine except for the intermittent shorts

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 6 měsíci

      @@life.b.s Where are you getting continuity to ground?

    • @life.b.s
      @life.b.s Před 5 měsíci

      ​@@JerseyMikeHVAC Hey Mike! Wanted to follow up back here and thank you for answering my questions above. I might have finally gotten the fix down after hours of chasing down a grounded wire. It seems the main issue was a dead relay on my Defrost Control Board. I had a reddit user call it out but wasn't fully convinced til I noticed that the Fuse would be blown after running for about 90 minutes or so, which was aligned to the defrost cycles, so I figured it must have been something defrost related. Bought a new defrost control board, swapped it out, and it looks like it's been running all night without popping a fuse. Here's to hopping it stays this way.

  • @jasonvalentin
    @jasonvalentin Před 6 měsíci

    thank you, you need to make o e of those HVAC for dummies books. I have a question so my Trane TWN024C100A2. runs normally for some time then the fan will stop and not run. board 21C140501G18 - CNT1923 then flashes 3 times, won't go to normal unless breakers reset. my unit has a coil thermostat along the bottom outer edge, connected to coil on control board and the ambient thermostat a little further away, plugged into ambient on the board too, my question is that upon inspection I noticed that the defrost temperature switch THT00811 has two wires they start off blue with white stripes, then turns purple with white stripes, I'm sure its faded over time, but only has one wire connected to the contractor, and the other wire capped off, the control board does not have pins specifically for defrost, I can't find any help.

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 6 měsíci

      3 flash codes on Trane Defrost board is an indication of low pressure in the system. Have the refrigerant levels been checked lately?

    • @jasonvalentin
      @jasonvalentin Před 6 měsíci

      Thank you for the response, I have not, just yet, but now that you bring it up, I’ll be calling someone to check that. Just been doing some maintenance, replaced capacitors and relay, and ran across the discharge line temp switch only having one wire connected to T2 and the other capped off. from the diagrams it shows the sump htr wired to the L1 terminal on the contactor, the other sump wire to one of the wires on temp switch, then the 2nd wire on the temp switch to the T2 on the contactor, what I have is one wire from the temp switch on T2, and the sump htr wires directly connected to L1 and L2 on the contactor. Looks like the switch is bypassed. I saw a photo of the same model heat pump and one of the temp switch wires and the other sump htr wire were wired together

  • @ananddesai1826
    @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

    Where would that be inside coils or outside coils?

  • @ananddesai1826
    @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

    Can you please guide me what could be wrong?
    I opened the unit and saw a DS2 fault light blinking 3 flashes and it looks like low pressure switch open.
    I cycled power and it went away then I tried to turn heat on and same thing happened the aux heat came on right away. This time I didnot see and fault
    I check across the Low pressure switch and it looks closed to me.
    Also when the aux heat was on the compress fan started running aswell.

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 4 měsíci

      Different models and years have different codes, so I can't really confirm it's a pressure switch issue. It's difficult to narrow it down with so many possibilities and no access to testing.

    • @ananddesai1826
      @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

      @@JerseyMikeHVAC so
      I checked the pressures and when in heat mode the pressures looks 60 psi and when I switch to cool the pressure drops to 0 and gets my system in hard lockout.

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 4 měsíci

      Do you have a filter dryer in the lineset? Maybe internally in the condensing unit? Or could be a bad TXV.
      @@ananddesai1826

  • @garza7676
    @garza7676 Před 5 měsíci

    Ran into a Nordine heat pump . Defrost board had a M and SW connectors . Wiring diagram didn’t have a legend . Do you know what these are for or mean ?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 5 měsíci

      M may be a manual mode option. Not sure about SW but could be a temp switch. Have the model number?

    • @garza7676
      @garza7676 Před 5 měsíci

      @@JerseyMikeHVAC I have the wiring diagram if you’d like to see it .

    • @garza7676
      @garza7676 Před 5 měsíci

      Model number Q6E-x48k

    • @garza7676
      @garza7676 Před 5 měsíci

      Nordyne

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 5 měsíci

      Had a hard time finding the model number, but I got some info from a manual on another model.
      The SW terminal is the return voltage for the hi/lo pressure switch circuit that the board sends out on the PRESS terminal to prove the circuit.
      The M terminal completes a circuit to activate the compressor contactor off the Y signal, and its purpose to provide some kind of control when connected to an economizer. I don't know exactly in this case what parameter in an economizer would cut power to the contactor, but my first guess is to allow the economizer to shut down the system on a fire damper/smoke detection switch. If there is a molex plug jumper connected to the econ molex plug with a jumper wire between 4 and 6 terminals, this is just a bypass that allows the Y signal to reach the contactor when an economizer is not installed. So basically, either way, power from the thermostat to the contactor runs through that M terminal.

  • @regularguy1140
    @regularguy1140 Před 5 měsíci

    My heat strips come on instantly, and my heat pump never kicks on. Works fine in cool mode. Any suggestions?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 5 měsíci

      Could be a few things, but a stuck reversing valve is not uncommon.

    • @regularguy1140
      @regularguy1140 Před 5 měsíci

      Turned out to be a bad thermostat.

  • @ananddesai1826
    @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

    In your opinion what is the issue?

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 4 měsíci

      I can't say with certainty without looking at it myself, but based on what you're telling me, I'd strongly suspect a plugged filter dryer.

  • @ananddesai1826
    @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

    I have bi direction filter

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 4 měsíci

      Does the copper line feel like different temperatures on each side of the filter when the system is running?

    • @ananddesai1826
      @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

      @@JerseyMikeHVAC yes

    • @JerseyMikeHVAC
      @JerseyMikeHVAC  Před 4 měsíci

      That may be your issue right there. @@ananddesai1826

    • @ananddesai1826
      @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

      We pumped some Freon yesterday
      Than I turned heat on but it’s not very effective.
      Than I turned it on cooling I just went in a hard lock out
      The lockout is when the low pressure switch is triggered a few times

    • @ananddesai1826
      @ananddesai1826 Před 4 měsíci

      @@JerseyMikeHVAC the TXV?