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#1
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We continue to have problems with our engine-driven refrigeration
system, and wondered if anybody knows what we might be doing wrong. We keep on blowing up compressors -- either they start to leak after a couple of months use, or they fail (i.e., no longer bring down the low-side pressure to a vacuum). We know it's not from 'slugging' ice, because we routinely monitor the state of the return line about 4 feet from the compressor, and it's never frozen. When the compressors leak, we naturally don't know it until the fridge doesn't cool anymore, when we look at the sight glass and see it's empty. This entails running the system for 5 minutes or more, empty, because that's how long it takes for liquid to appear in the sight glass when the system is full. Is that a long enough time to ruin the compressor? The last time we opened the system up, we found some black residue blocking one of the filters at the expansion valve. Any idea how dirt could have gotten into the system? Maybe from a compressor going bad? How do you clean it all out? |
#2
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what Freon's are you using? Was it a R12 system that you converted to 134A?
Is there a high pressure switch that opens the clutch? Who's system is it? More questions then answers right know. "Akka" wrote in message oups.com... We continue to have problems with our engine-driven refrigeration system, and wondered if anybody knows what we might be doing wrong. We keep on blowing up compressors -- either they start to leak after a couple of months use, or they fail (i.e., no longer bring down the low-side pressure to a vacuum). We know it's not from 'slugging' ice, because we routinely monitor the state of the return line about 4 feet from the compressor, and it's never frozen. When the compressors leak, we naturally don't know it until the fridge doesn't cool anymore, when we look at the sight glass and see it's empty. This entails running the system for 5 minutes or more, empty, because that's how long it takes for liquid to appear in the sight glass when the system is full. Is that a long enough time to ruin the compressor? The last time we opened the system up, we found some black residue blocking one of the filters at the expansion valve. Any idea how dirt could have gotten into the system? Maybe from a compressor going bad? How do you clean it all out? |
#3
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"Akka" wrote in news:1155451606.008019.324930
@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com: We continue to have problems with our engine-driven refrigeration system, and wondered if anybody knows what we might be doing wrong. We keep on blowing up compressors -- either they start to leak after a couple of months use, or they fail (i.e., no longer bring down the low-side pressure to a vacuum). We know it's not from 'slugging' ice, because we routinely monitor the state of the return line about 4 feet from the compressor, and it's never frozen. When the compressors leak, we naturally don't know it until the fridge doesn't cool anymore, when we look at the sight glass and see it's empty. This entails running the system for 5 minutes or more, empty, because that's how long it takes for liquid to appear in the sight glass when the system is full. Is that a long enough time to ruin the compressor? The last time we opened the system up, we found some black residue blocking one of the filters at the expansion valve. Any idea how dirt could have gotten into the system? Maybe from a compressor going bad? How do you clean it all out? I'll make some guesses.....(c; Make sure there is a loop in the return line from the cold plate to the compressor for residual freon to collect in and boil off (you don't see moving freon freezing the outside of the line). Make sure the suction side of the cold plate is the TOP of the cold plate, sucking freon gas off that has already boiled. I've seen a couple hooked up upside down that blew the compressor sucking liquid. Does it have a dryer bottle on the system to get the residual water out of the liquid line? The bottle may have come apart inside, filling the expansion valve with material you're seeing. When it becomes clogged, the expansion valve opens and may pass the stuff onto the compressor through the cold plate, jamming the compressor, but not very likely. Replace the dryer bottle, anyway. OK, you've put the vacuum pump on the system and sucked all the air out, right? (I say this in jest as I met 3 who thought, wrongly, they could just blow the air out with freon, which won't work.) How much refridgerant OIL did you pump in before charging it?? Oh? It needs special OIL?...(c; Yes, it does, or the compressor will lock from lack of lubrication. Many don't know it. They just start filling it with freon and run it dry....not good. That's two things that make a compressor blow.....no lube oil....and the biggest cause - pumping LIQUID freon! The compressor's very low in the system so any liquid freon that didn't boil off flows downhill into the cylinders made-for-gas-only. You'll hear a knocking sound as liquid freon hits hot pistons from heat-of- compression. The freon explodes in the hot cylinders, boiling off immediately. The pressure the explosion creates is too instantaneous to flow out the valves into the high pressure outlet. Make a loop in the hose from the cold plate so that can't happen, so any liquid blown out the cold plate runs back into the cold plate, hopefully into the TOP of the cold plate. Anything sound familiar? What pressures are you measuring on the Schrader valves? |
#4
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"Rick" wrote in
: what Freon's are you using? Was it a R12 system that you converted to 134A? Is there a high pressure switch that opens the clutch? Who's system is it? Yes, there's another angle, too! When it's converted to R-134a, you should see just a SPRAY of R-134a in the sight glass, NOT solid liquid with no bubbles like R-12 was. R-134a is much more cooling so we don't fill the system. http://www.wikihow.com/Fix-Cars-Air-Conditioning http://www.machinerylubrication.com/...?articleid=310 &relatedbookgroup=Lubrication http://www.sanden.com/support/servic.../retrofit.html http://www.everything2.com/index.pl?node_id=1674978 To sum up from everything I can read.....DON'T. If it was working great on R-12, find R-12. Some sailors brought me back 4 cases of 16 oz cans from the Caribbean islands for my old '73 220D's 2-cylinder system. They paid 68c/can for it! Damned stuff was made in TENNESEE...LAST YEAR! This replacement business is a big EPA-sponsored RIPOFF... The ozone hole over Antarctica got bigger, year-after-year, after the ban. Another government lie, raising prices. The SUN causes the hole, stupids. |
#5
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On 12 Aug 2006 23:46:46 -0700, "Akka" wrote:
We continue to have problems with our engine-driven refrigeration system, and wondered if anybody knows what we might be doing wrong. We keep on blowing up compressors -- either they start to leak after a couple of months use, or they fail (i.e., no longer bring down the low-side pressure to a vacuum). We know it's not from 'slugging' ice, because we routinely monitor the state of the return line about 4 feet from the compressor, and it's never frozen. When the compressors leak, we naturally don't know it until the fridge doesn't cool anymore, when we look at the sight glass and see it's empty. This entails running the system for 5 minutes or more, empty, because that's how long it takes for liquid to appear in the sight glass when the system is full. Is that a long enough time to ruin the compressor? The last time we opened the system up, we found some black residue blocking one of the filters at the expansion valve. Any idea how dirt could have gotten into the system? Maybe from a compressor going bad? How do you clean it all out? When compressors go bad, they usually leave metal flakes at the expansion valve filter. Black gunge suggests incompatible oil, or inadequate flushing when changing refrigerant type. You replaced the dryer/reservoir of course? You filled with the recommended type and quantity of oil, I expect? You DO have an electric clutch on the compressor drive, I suppose? There is a cutout to the clutch for underpressure/overtemp, I expect? Brian Whatcott Altus OK |
#6
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All engine driven refrigeration compressors were intended to be used on
automobile air conditioning and not for medium to low temperature refrigeration. In most cases if a compressor had a good service life in an automobile it could work in a lower temperature system if the system is designed correctly. If an engine drive refrigeration system is designed and installed correctly the compressor will operate for twenty plus years this is a proven fact. Engine driven systems designed by the original companies of Crosby and Grunert were still running with the same compressors, these were installed in the late 1970's. There are a small percentage of new and rebuilt compressors that do fail prematurely in the first twenty five hours but repeated compressor failures are preventable. There are a number of reasons why the engine driven compressor fail: Compressor capacity is excessive for the size of holding plates; If a compressor is putting out enough energy to freeze a 500 pound holding plates in one hour and the plate only weighs 50 pounds the refrigerant and oil return will not be adequate for lubrication or compressor cooling, because the expansion device won't allow the flow. The colder the plates are the less flow of needed refrigerant and oil. Remember the compressor was designed for high back pressure applications. Too large an expansion valve for the evaporator coils in holding plates; During the off cycle when holding plates are colder than compressor refrigerant mixed with oil will migrate to the cold plates. Then after start up with a large valve orifice there will be a quick flood of this liquid mixture flooding back to compressor causing stress on reed valves and connecting rods. Some systems must have suction line accumulators to reduce the liquid return to an acceptable level. Improper type of refrigerant and oil; Most engine driven refrigeration systems violate the basic principles of refrigeration, Condensing unit and return line along with evaporator should be designed to allow gravity to assist in liquid return, Each component in the system must be able to match the capacity of the compressor. Oil return will always depend on miscibility in our boat refrigeration systems, R12 and mineral oil are miscible, 134a or R12 and polyester oil are miscible all other refrigerants lack different levels of miscibility at low temperatures. Too large of a line in holding plate or anywhere in low pressure side of system will cause oil accumulation and compressor oil starvation. Too small of a line or restriction in low pressure side of system will cause oil accumulation in lines and very low compressor suction pressure. |
#7
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"Akka" wrote:
We continue to have problems with our engine-driven refrigeration system, and wondered if anybody knows what we might be doing wrong. We keep on blowing up compressors -- either they start to leak after a couple of months use, or they fail (i.e., no longer bring down the low-side pressure to a vacuum). We know it's not from 'slugging' ice, because we routinely monitor the state of the return line about 4 feet from the compressor, and it's never frozen. When the compressors leak, we naturally don't know it until the fridge doesn't cool anymore, when we look at the sight glass and see it's empty. This entails running the system for 5 minutes or more, empty, because that's how long it takes for liquid to appear in the sight glass when the system is full. Is that a long enough time to ruin the compressor? The last time we opened the system up, we found some black residue blocking one of the filters at the expansion valve. Any idea how dirt could have gotten into the system? Maybe from a compressor going bad? How do you clean it all out? We have an engine driven/shore power refrigeration system that can be done either way. The key to our particular system is not to run the engine driven refrigeration more than 45 minutes at a time. We normally do it once in the morning and once in the evening. If you run it for more time than that, the fluids disappear to somewhere and the compressor freezes up. We have been running ours that way since we bought the boat in 1998 (on instructions from the PO who had the same problem as you seem to be having with blown compressors), and have had no problems with it. The only other thing is that we always check to see that water is coming out the exhaust (like we do with the engine). When we run it on shore power the time isn't as critical, but we do about the same as when we are using the engine. Otherwise it will sometimes stop itself when it gets really cold, although it doesn't seem to hurt it when it does that. grandma Rosalie S/V RosalieAnn, Leonardtown, MD CSY 44 WO #156 http://home.mindspring.com/~gmbeasley/id1.html |
#8
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In article .com,
"Akka" wrote: We continue to have problems with our engine-driven refrigeration system, and wondered if anybody knows what we might be doing wrong. We keep on blowing up compressors -- either they start to leak after a couple of months use, or they fail (i.e., no longer bring down the low-side pressure to a vacuum). We know it's not from 'slugging' ice, because we routinely monitor the state of the return line about 4 feet from the compressor, and it's never frozen. When the compressors leak, we naturally don't know it until the fridge doesn't cool anymore, when we look at the sight glass and see it's empty. This entails running the system for 5 minutes or more, empty, because that's how long it takes for liquid to appear in the sight glass when the system is full. Is that a long enough time to ruin the compressor? The last time we opened the system up, we found some black residue blocking one of the filters at the expansion valve. Any idea how dirt could have gotten into the system? Maybe from a compressor going bad? How do you clean it all out? What you need is AN ELCTRIC CLUTCH on that compressor, so that it only runs when the Refer needs to cool itself. Almost every Car A/C has one, and for the same reasons you NEED one. Also does you compressor commect to the rest of the system with some kind of vibration proof hoses or flexable piping? Now there is a novel idea. Keeping the engine vibrations out of the refer system. Me |
#9
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Larry and all other responders,
Thanks for all the advice. We learned a lot from it. On the R12/R134a issue: too late. We converted from R12 to R134a years ago, and the system was working fine with R134a for a long time -- now, no longer. When we installed the last compressor (marked clearly 'R134a' all over it) last month, we evacuated the system and put in a new dryer, a big accumulator, and of course, gas. The compressor comes with oil in it, as does the gas, so we didn't add any more. We put in enough R134a to just barely fill the sight glass -- maybe that was too much! The expansion valves are on the original factory settings -- 2 turns closed from fully open. There are 2 low spots below compressor level in the low-pressure copper tubing: one where the tube runs under the floorboards from the fridge to the engine compartment, and one at the bottom of a full loop just before the compressor. When we last charged the system, we had 140 psi on the high side, and something below atmospheric pressure on the low side, when the system was running and the plates were cold. When we closed the valve on the high-pressure side, we got 150 psi on the high side and a full vacuum on the low side. That was the day before the compressor blew. Now it doesn't draw down to a vacuum (only to about atmospheric pressure) and doesn't hold the pressure differential at all, after shutoff. So we figure it's blown. We didn't hear any knocking sound before the compressor blew but of course the engine was running at the time and the engine room is sound-insulated from the cabin. Initially, we did see a light fast flow of freon across the bottom of the sight glass, then nothing. We waited 5 minutes, turned off the system, hooked up the gauges, and discovered we had no pressure -- and a blown compressor. We don't have a high-pressure valve. We do have an electric clutch, but in practice it never cuts out because we never run the fridge more than about an hour at a time, to avoid freezing the lines. We also check fairly regularly after we've recharged the system with R134a that we're not frosting the return lines. So right now I'm concentrating on three possibilities: (1) we may have overcharged the system, causing fluid to be forced through the expansion valves and back into the compressor at startup; (2) the expansion valves might be clogged up and the compressor starved for oil because of the lack of a return supply; or (3) the new compressor simply blew -- we discovered that 3 of the nuts on the compressor head weren't fully tight. But that in itself wouldn't cause the compressor to fail, would it? The gunk on the valve filters certainly could have come from incompatible gasses. We used to get the unit refilled from time to time by 'professionals' and we're pretty sure at least one of them put in the wrong gas. That was 2 years ago, but still ... So, what to do? Apparently, compressors can't be repaired (though it sure looks like one could replace the head gasket), so we have to buy a new one. When we do, we'll open up the valves and inspect them, replace the dryer, vacuum-pump the system, then barely fill it until we see liquid running across the bottom of the sight glass. What else? More oil? Lighter-weight oil because of the low operating temperatures? |
#10
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Akka wrote:
Larry and all other responders, Thanks for all the advice. We learned a lot from it. On the R12/R134a issue: too late. We converted from R12 to R134a years ago, and the system was working fine with R134a for a long time -- now, no longer. When we installed the last compressor (marked clearly 'R134a' all over it) last month, we evacuated the system and put in a new dryer, a big accumulator, and of course, gas. The compressor comes with oil in it, as does the gas, so we didn't add any more. I thought when r134a came with PAG oil and POE is usually recomended for marine use. Maybe I'm wrong ... When we last charged the system, we had 140 psi on the high side, and something below atmospheric pressure on the low side, when the system was running and the plates were cold. When we closed the valve on the high-pressure side, we got 150 psi on the high side and a full vacuum on the low side. That was the day before the compressor blew. ... 150 pounds sounds real high to me. My system, a DC powered Tecumseh compressor, runs at about 95 psi on the high side. This corresponds to a temp about 20 degrees hotter than the cooling water. |
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