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"Richard Kollmann" wrote in message
... Skip, Unfortunately all manufacturers of boat icebox conversion units have some items in their designs that cause unwanted problems. Pre- charged refrigerant lines have always come with O rings to prevent refrigerant loss during assembly. Ounce torque down a metal seal permanently prevents line connector leakage but Frigoboat relies on O ring seals only to retain refrigerant. There are many applications where O rings are used to prevent leaks. Now you are finding out why spare O rings come with new Frigoboat units and also why at boat shows they demonstrate how to change Orings. What you must find out for yourself is the difficulty in re-commissioning systems after replacing a refrigerant line O ring. When reliability and safety is demanded from O rings shelf life of new rings is limited to one year. I read on another forum where there was a discussion about replacing these Frigoboat O rings every five years. My guess is that only one out of ten refrigeration service technicians could add the correct amount of refrigerant to your system. ************ Hi, again, Richard, and list, Apparently, despite my not being a technician, let alone one in ten, I managed... The O-ring replacement was a non-event. Once the system was closed up again, I evacuated the system. From Frigoboat's "manual" online, " The suction side service valve normally will be on a stub of tubing that is connected directly to the top of the compressor. " That jibes with what you said, but everyone I spoke with in vendor or distributor level phone calls wanted me to have a tap on the low side line - there wasn't one, but the stub is apparently where Veco (the US distributor for Frigoboat) wants you to put the line connection - after repeated assurances in each call that there was no stub on the blue line, all agreed that the stub "would do" - you'd think the Veco folks would have been familiar with their own manual :{)) I ran a 6cfm pump for over 12 hours and removed it. Connected up my can (with the adapter which is scarcer than hen's teeth locally), to the R12 line I bought, purged it with a nice blast, and left a trickle coming out as I connected to the stub (to assure fully purged line, no possible moisture intrusion) and put in an initial charge, with the compressor off. Ran it for a couple of hours, and found the plates merely cool. Shut it down, waited for equalization, and added more. Based on the "cool line" on the can, I'd not put in nearly 6oz initially, the expected charge required. Run, check, it wasn't making full cold, yet, so I added a third shot, ditto on shutdown/equalization/restart. That showed promise, bringing the previously 85° boxes (6" extruded polystyrene covered in epoxy and gelcoat) down. Checking the exit line, there was a very small bit of ice, but the box wasn't down to temps yet, so I left it alone. Overnight, the boxes came to 8° (the freezer set point), and, just by spillover, as I'd unhooked the fan, 27° in the reefer. I had to stick my finger into the bulkhead hole to feel any ice, but it was there, right at the edge. I'll assume, until I load the boxes and get them down to temps, that my charge level is correct. Despite those temps, last night when it was still a few degrees over the set point, there wasn't frost on all the plate surface. However, an infrared thermometer showed the highest temp to be zero, and the rest ranged down to -21° with most of it in the -15 to -18 range. I concluded that to mean that it was adequately charged :{)) - but didn't know for sure that it wasn't slightly overcharged. This morning's feel for the ice on the return line suggests it's right on. The lack of frost everywhere, despite my small circulating fan in the freezer running, suggests I have the reefer door gasket difficulties resolved, as (I presume) there was very little moisture in the two spaces, starting from hot and wet air. And, despite my bragging on the keel cooler's amazing ability to dissipate heat in the air, I wrapped it in a wash rag, propped it on all 4 sides, and ran a trickle of water into it (enough that it dripped continuously). Initially, that water was VERY (not to burn, but notable) hot. As the box came down, it became less so. So, I'll leave that in place, as we're routinely over 90° here during the day, and only low 80s at night. All is well here. Thanks for your help! L8R Skip, off to fix dings in both doors -- Morgan 461 #2 SV Flying Pig KI4MPC See our galleries at www.justpickone.org/skip/gallery ! Follow us at http://groups.yahoo.com/group/TheFlyingPigLog and/or http://groups.google.com/group/flyingpiglog "Twenty years from now you will be more disappointed by the things you didn't do than by the ones you did do. So throw off the bowlines. Sail away from the safe harbor. Catch the trade winds in your sails. Explore. Dream. Discover." - Mark Twain |
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