5. Coil plugging
If filters are not changed or your HVAC
coils cleaned properly in a timely manner, your coil will actually act
as a filter. When dirt builds up on the coil, it will prevent heat
transfer and can cause a 20% to 40% drop in performance. Dirt adds to
the coil resistance and will absolutely cause your coil to fail
prematurely.
4. Vibration
When your HVAC coils are installed near a
moving piece of equipment, vibration can occur and cause leaks. The
area where these leaks occur is very important and will clue you in to
if the problem is vibration. If they are near the tube sheet and look
like they are slicing through the tube, the coils should be isolated
from the rest of the system to prevent vibration from causing damage.
One way to combat this is by oversizing the tube sheet holes, but many
manufacturers will not do this. Condenser coils are usually the most
common victims of vibration.
3. Corrosive environment
This applies to both the air in the
environment and inside the tubes. For instance, if there is something in
the air that is corrosive, it will eat away at the copper tubes whether
you have 0.020in wall or 0.049in wall. This is very common in areas
where there may be salt in the air. To keep the costs down from going to
a stainless-steel or cupro-nickel coil, we usually suggest coating the
HVAC coils. Steam condensate and untreated water can cause corrosion
within the tubes of HVAC coils as well. If you have a steam coil that
has failed before the one year warranty, there’s a great chance
corrosive agents are in the steam and it’s eating away at the copper
tubes.
2. Freeze-ups
Most people think that when HVAC coils
freeze, the water or condensate laying in the coil freezes into ice and
it expands causing the tubes to bulge and eventually spring leaks. What
really happens is the coil will freeze in multiple areas simultaneously
and it’s the pressure between these areas that cause the tubes to swell
and eventually burst. These are very easy to spot as the leaks will run
the length of the tube rather than around the tube. And be very careful when considering “freeze proof” coils. If you remove 5-6in from the fin length to make it fit, the coil performance will suffer considerably.
1. System design
You would be amazed how many HVAC coils
were never properly designed for their systems. If there was a problem
with design, replacing the coil will only duplicate the problem. A high
percentage of all our projects were because the HVAC coils were built
incorrectly or was never designed right in the first place. Sometimes,
owners want to improve performance by adding a couple rows, but don’t
consider the air pressure drop or fluid pressure drop that comes with
it.
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