HVAC 056 Target Superheat for a fixed metering device

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  • čas přidán 26. 08. 2024
  • you can download the Target superheat chart here
    www.love2hvac....
    the formula is Target SH=[(IDWB X 3) - ODT - 80]/2
    ___Indoor wetbulb F______ x3 =___________ - ___outdoor temperature_____=_______ ÷2= _________F target Superheat
    Later we will be using wireless instruments to with the measurequick app to find this automatically. I first want you to have some appreciation for what the number means and why its important.
    measurequick.com/

Komentáře • 63

  • @ricardojacquez3358
    @ricardojacquez3358 Před 2 měsíci +1

    Your the Best instructor, Thanks

  • @SavisJavidan
    @SavisJavidan Před 4 měsíci +1

    Thanks a lot for this clear explanation.
    In the description (formula) in upper line you wrote-80 but in lower lines you forgot this -80

  • @coldfinger459sub0
    @coldfinger459sub0 Před 3 lety +5

    Your method of teaching in layman‘s terms and using objects in every day life that students who are academically challenged( not the book learners who learn by reading) get the basic knowledge across so they can see and grasp and understand.
    I can see you understand definitely how to teach the students who don’t fall within the public education system of teaching out of the textbook 👍

  • @mitchellarmyguy2515
    @mitchellarmyguy2515 Před 3 lety +4

    You should really sit down and write out a book kind of like ac service tech. I would def order your stuff to really support the channel and information you are putting out. I notice little to no ads on your videos and you deserve some return for your efforts.

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety +3

      I wrote a book, a school published it and claimed it as their own and screwed me out of all the work I did including building an entire online program, fusion program, complete curriculum and much more. Lesson learned, get everything in writing.
      Craig is awesome, smart and a great guy. I love what he is doing and I'm honored to know him.

    • @mitchellarmyguy2515
      @mitchellarmyguy2515 Před 3 lety +4

      @@love2hvac that really sucks man. Like truly. Where im from that's violence inducing. Would love to see that book but knowing they stole it from you I wouldn't even look at it. I did support Craig. I have the book, cards, and large poster set. All quality items.

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety +3

      I will eventually re do it. Until then I will give out printable quick reference notes and guides.

    • @jericosha2842
      @jericosha2842 Před 3 lety +1

      @@love2hvac dang dude I'm so sorry you were done dirty like that... You deserve better. Thanks for everything you do.

  • @samsonandarige396
    @samsonandarige396 Před rokem +1

    I Love yr explanation. Not only Am slow learner but English my second language. But you make it easy for me to understand.
    Thank you.

  • @RonNL1030
    @RonNL1030 Před 3 lety +1

    Don’t stop doing such a wonderful work. Sure you’ll be rewarded and not only on money terms.

  • @forestpassineau
    @forestpassineau Před 3 lety +3

    Really great education man! Your one of the best if not the best at explaining! Big props!! Love your videos!! Looking forward to many more!

  • @m-yarahmad6285
    @m-yarahmad6285 Před rokem +2

    Very good

  • @richardcascio660
    @richardcascio660 Před 2 lety +1

    Ty you are the best instructor.

  • @dario6749
    @dario6749 Před rokem

    First of all I have to say that you are the best instructor I have ever seen, thanks for all your hard work. Secondly, I have a question.
    Today I was working on a r22 air-conditioning unit with a piston inside.
    I took my readings inside and I had, 57 wb and 70 degrees db. My air temperature entering my odc was 60 degrees. I looked the target superheat and was 17 degrees, but I was getting 31 degrees of superheat with 150 psig at the outdoor coil and 50 psig at the indoor coil. I thought that I was underfeeding the evaporator coil probably because the outdoor temperature was too low and the pressure was not enough to push enough refrigerant through the metering device.
    What I did was to use a charging jacket to increase the pressure up to 210 psig at the outdoor coil. My readings got much better with 20 degrees of superheat and 60 psig at the evaporator coil.
    I just hope I didn't fooled the my readings for using the jacket.
    What do you think?
    Thanks a lot.

  • @zipperdingo6385
    @zipperdingo6385 Před 3 lety +1

    I like your teaching method

  • @honestman276
    @honestman276 Před 9 měsíci +1

    Thanks from Bangladesh.

  • @abdulhvac2395
    @abdulhvac2395 Před 3 lety

    Thank you for sharing

  • @shine-cg9uf
    @shine-cg9uf Před 3 lety +1

    Very helpful 👌

  • @iqbalchaudhary218
    @iqbalchaudhary218 Před 2 lety

    Thanks!

  • @stevem9629
    @stevem9629 Před 3 lety +1

    Good morning, did you notice the light in your shop just got a little bit brighter? The reason why because the “light bulb” in my head just turned on.

  • @sina-zy1hi
    @sina-zy1hi Před rokem +1

    Thank you very much but i have a really important question !! I live in a dry climate which cause in low indoor wet bulb and high outdoor dry bulb. Yesterday i tried to check my 24k BTUs air conditioner via superheat chart So i start measuring. The indoor wet bulb was 60.1 F and outdoor dry bulb was 105 F which resulting a Target superheat in danger zone in the chart !! So what should i do ? Which Target superheat should i pick up for Max efficiency and compressor keep running without danger? Actual superheat was about 10F in suction line.

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před rokem +1

      In that climate you need a TXV,
      You can raise the temperature in the thermostat.
      You can adjust the charge so the superheat is no lower than 5 at the hottest part of the day.

  • @samersarah957
    @samersarah957 Před 2 lety +1

    Hello Mr.Ty. Talking about superheat the design of manufacture is 5-15 F degree in this point should be in freezing so l can’t imagine why the vapor line not freeze. Another question in residential A/C what is the temperature that hit the compressor should be? Thankfully.🌴🌷

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 2 lety +2

      Freezing and superheat are not the same.
      You can have high superheat and a freezing coil.
      You can have a coil not freezing and a flooded compressor.
      Superheat is the difference between the actual suction line temperature and suction saturated(boiling) temperature.
      You can have suction line temperature of 30 and a saturated (boiling) temperature of 20 giving you a superheat of 10. Walk in cooler is an example.
      You could have a suction line temperature of 50 and a saturated (boiling) temperature of 40 giving you a superheat of 10. Example air cooling.
      Both examples superheat was good one had a freezing evaporator and the other did not.
      As for what superheat should be it will depend on if it's an adjustable TXV, a non adjustable TXV and you have to refer to the manufacture data, or a fixed office where you will need the target superheat chart, formula, or app.

  • @hlmbdd5566
    @hlmbdd5566 Před 3 lety +3

    Mr. Ty,
    I have some confusions I want you to clear for me please,
    The outdoor dry bulb usually stable it stays almost the same before and after starting the unit.
    But the wet bulb temperature will change before and during running the unit,
    So at what time we need to measure the wet-bulb at startup or until the system stabilized
    Thanks

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety +1

      Great question, about every 15 minutes approximately . This is the benefit to a wireless wet bulb spectrometer. Even better the measurquick app with wireless instruments will automatically adjust all reading and more on the fly. It's a beautiful thing.

    • @hlmbdd5566
      @hlmbdd5566 Před 3 lety +1

      thanks, I believe, in the future, they will invent an auto adaptation control system that will optimize the subcool and superheat in real-time.

    • @hlmbdd5566
      @hlmbdd5566 Před 3 lety +1

      Waiting for target subcool calculation
      Thanks

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety

      @@hlmbdd5566
      The target subcooling for fixed orifice will be ready within the houer. The TXV (TEV) does and has been doing that for many years. It's great and simple. That video on TEV will be ready in a few days.

  • @jaimizzygaming3368
    @jaimizzygaming3368 Před 3 lety +1

    Hello ty quick question, so on your example for Las Vegas at 7:10 I guess the best solution would be to install a txv?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety

      Yes, a TXV is superior to a fixed orifice. It will adjust to the conditions.

  • @MvRKKK1994
    @MvRKKK1994 Před 2 lety +1

    Is there anywhere formula and chart for celsius ?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 2 lety +1

      I have been looking but I have not found one yet. I also get distracted easily.

  • @firmbutton6485
    @firmbutton6485 Před rokem

    I think I missed the wet build dry bulb explanation ?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před rokem

      czcams.com/video/cW5XA1fKaAU/video.html

  • @Hvacr123
    @Hvacr123 Před 2 lety

    (3 x wet bulb ) minus 80 + minus out side dry bulb / 2 = target super heat .

  • @eloy09
    @eloy09 Před rokem

    Hi Ty, is there anyway i can compute target superheat for water cooled condenser?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před rokem

      I use water entering temperature in place of the outdoor temperature.

  • @tecniman356
    @tecniman356 Před 4 měsíci

    In case the unit have an TXV, is the same formula to calculate superheat?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 4 měsíci

      No, the TXV's job is to control superheat regardless of the conditions. 8-12 at the coil 12-18 at the condenser depending on line length, and manufacture brand.
      It needs proper air flow and the right amount of refrigerant feeding it to do this.

  • @n10ct80
    @n10ct80 Před 2 lety

    Awesome video. I am a little confused though. In terms of refrigeration, how does the refrigant ever to atleast 5 degrees of superheat?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 2 lety

      If you look at the parameters in the chart, with a high outdoor temperature and a low indoor wetbulb a properly operating system would be running be running below a 5 superheat.
      This means you should not run the system under those conditions.
      Or install a TXV and the chart is not needed because it maintains superheat regardless of the conditions.

    • @n10ct80
      @n10ct80 Před 2 lety

      @@love2hvac Then i guess my question is about where you take the wet bulb temperature or what the typical wet bulb temperature would be for refrigerator. I assumed that the air entering the evaporator would be recycled in the refrigerator and that it would be under 40 degrees.

  • @gearstil
    @gearstil Před 3 lety +1

    Hello, the target SH formula is obtained empirically or it has a math proof? Is there a formula for centigrade? I know how to convert from F to C but I don`t know if 80 and division by 2 remain valid.

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety

      That is a great question! I do not know the answer, let me see if I can find it.

    • @MTauhaA
      @MTauhaA Před 3 měsíci

      @@love2hvac i have asked this on hvac-talk but i'd be interested in your take on a way to translate this to refrigeration appliances

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 měsíci +1

      @@MTauhaA here is a pdf link for the C version
      analogov.com/attachment.php?aid=399

  • @stevenmorales5181
    @stevenmorales5181 Před rokem

    So can I use this formula on any tonnage, Freon or any SEER system?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před rokem

      Only for fixed orifice metering device on air cooled systems.
      Most commercial systems uses the superior TXV so it won't apply.

  • @realestateservicessaleshea99

    The target should also be in the installation instructions"attached" to the unit(charging chart).🤔🍺
    Stay safe.
    Retired(werk'n) keyboard super tech.
    Wear your safety glasses

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety +1

      100% correct! I will be covering factory charging methods before too long.

    • @bradmironik6137
      @bradmironik6137 Před 3 lety

      Unless you come across old equipment that either doesn't have the information or it is faded to the point you can't read. Ty's chart seems easy to follow. I use an old trane slide rule that a tech gave to me with all the information covered in this video. Easy to use.

  • @garypoplin4599
    @garypoplin4599 Před rokem

    So, you have too much superheat at the end of your saturation.

  • @stupidtablet1478
    @stupidtablet1478 Před 3 lety +1

    this table should be converted into a slide rule.

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety

      Some alps already implement the formula. Measuquick is my favorite

  • @mitchellarmyguy2515
    @mitchellarmyguy2515 Před 3 lety +1

    You say 80 while pointing at 801 .....am I missing something?

    • @love2hvac
      @love2hvac  Před 3 lety

      Possibly, I will have to look. Dyslexia gives me problems with numbers.

    • @mitchellarmyguy2515
      @mitchellarmyguy2515 Před 3 lety

      @@love2hvac oh ok, gotcha, was just wondering. Sometimes the more experienced will throw out shortcuts without even realizing it.

    • @garypoplin4599
      @garypoplin4599 Před rokem

      That is not a “1” next to the 80 Ty pointed to in the formula: it is a closing bracket to match the opening bracket.