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AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS
A/C COMPONENTS
CONTROLS & SWITCHES
A/C DATA TAGS
A/C TYPES, ENERGY SOURCES
RATED COOLING CAPACITY
AIR CONDITIONER BTU CHART
SEER RATINGS
OPERATING COST
SYSTEM OPERATION
OPERATING TEMPERATURES
OPERATING DEFECTS
LOST COOLING CAPACITY
COMPRESSOR CONDENSER
AIR HANDLER UNIT
  DIRTY A/C BLOWERS
  DIRTY COOLING COIL
  FROST BUILD-UP
  BLOWER LEAKS, RUST & MOLD
  ADDING A/C: RETROFIT SIZING
AIR FILTERS for HVAC SYSTEMS
CONDENSATE HANDLING
CLEANING & Legionella BACTERIA
DUCT SYSTEM DEFECTS
FAN AUTO ON CONTROLS
A/C REFRIGERANTS
A/C REFRIGERANT LEAK DETECTION
A/C DIAGNOSTIC FAQs
INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
CRITICAL DEFECTS
Air Conditioning "How To" Books
FURNACES WARM AIR HEATING SYSTEMS

More Information



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Photograph of an air conditioning add-on system retrofitted to an existing hot air furnace

Sizing Retrofit Conditioning Air Handlers
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  • Sizing Retrofit Conditioning Air Handlers: How to Add Air Conditioning to Hot Air Heating Systems
  • Air conditioning air handlers - Fan Coil Unit Inspection, Diagnosis, Repair, Replacement
Our site offers impartial, unbiased advice without conflicts of interest. We will block advertisements which we discover or readers inform us are associated with bad business practices, false-advertising, or junk science. Our contact info is at inspect-ny.com/appointment.htm.

This chapter of "How to Inspect the Central Air Conditioning or Cooling System" discusses the Sizing of Retrofit Conditioning Air Handlers: How to Add Air Conditioning to Hot Air Heating Systems. Here we discuss the problems that occur if an add-on air conditioning component (to an existing hot air heating system) is not properly sized. Contact us to suggest text changes and additions and, if you wish, to receive online listing and credit for that contribution. © Copyright 2008 Daniel Friedman, All Rights Reserved. Information Accuracy & Bias Pledge is at below-left. Use links at the left of each page to navigate this document or to view other topics at this website. Green links show where you are in our document or website.

ADDING A/C: RETROFIT SIZING - Air Conditioning Retrofit Errors When Adding Air Conditioning to an Existing Hot Air Heating System: Improper Air Conditioning Cooling Coil Size

Photograph of  Mis-matched cooling coil much larger than blower unit The typical indoor half of an air conditioning system is comprised of a blower fan which moves building air (through return ducts) across an evaporator coil (which cools and dehumidifies the building air) and then through supply ducts to various building rooms. Liquid refrigerant is metered into the evaporator coil where it evaporates or changes state from a liquid to a gas.

This state change from liquid to gas absorbs heat and thus cools the evaporator coil. As air is cooled by moving across the evaporator coil, moisture is removed from the air (cool air holds less moisture than warm air). The condensate is moved to an acceptable disposal point, perhaps by a condensate pump to a building drain.

But a larger evaporator coil does not necessarily mean we'll see an equivalent improvement in the cooling capacity of the air conditioning system. In fact if the cooling coil is too large for the air handler or "blower unit" the air conditioning system will not work properly.

The photo shows that an evaporator coil has been added atop an existing heating furnace. Using the existing blower and duct work and simply adding an evaporator coil atop the unit is a common way to add air conditioning to an existing furnace and duct system, and such air conditioning retrofits can work quite well by taking advantage of an existing duct system and air handler.

But to work properly the evaporator coil (or cooling coil) should not be too large for the air movement capacity of the existing air handling system. Otherwise the air handler won't be able to move enough air across the evaporator coil to prevent freeze-ups and the net result may be less cooling capacity rather than more. In other words, when the new evaporator coil for an add-on air conditioning system is too large, the blower will not move enough air across the coil, probably leading to the evaporator coil becoming blocked by ice.

Similarly, the air movement capability of the blower assembly, including the speed of the fan of an existing furnace needs to be matched to the evaporator coil's needs. The speed of air flow through ductwork and its delivery into a building are different for heating than for cooling a building. Some contemporary combination units which provide both heating and cooling air to a building make use of a dual speed or variable speed fan.

If when inspecting a "retrofit" air conditioning system (like the one in this photograph) you see that the evaporator coil is much larger than the furnace blower atop which it sits, the system is probably not properly designed and it may not work correctly. An expert air conditioning service technician or design specialist should evaluate the system when you see this condition.








AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS
A/C COMPONENTS
CONTROLS & SWITCHES
A/C DATA TAGS
A/C TYPES, ENERGY SOURCES
RATED COOLING CAPACITY
AIR CONDITIONER BTU CHART
SEER RATINGS
OPERATING COST
SYSTEM OPERATION
OPERATING TEMPERATURES
OPERATING DEFECTS
LOST COOLING CAPACITY
COMPRESSOR CONDENSER
AIR HANDLER UNIT
  DIRTY A/C BLOWERS/A>
  
DIRTY COOLING COIL
  FROST BUILD-UP
  BLOWER LEAKS, RUST & MOLD
  ADDING A/C: RETROFIT SIZING<
AIR FILTERS for HVAC SYSTEMS
CONDENSATE HANDLING
CLEANING & Legionella BACTERIA
DUCT SYSTEM DEFECTS
FAN AUTO ON CONTROLS
A/C REFRIGERANTS
A/C REFRIGERANT LEAK DETECTION
A/C DIAGNOSTIC FAQs
INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
CRITICAL DEFECTS
Air Conditioning "How To" Books
FURNACES WARM AIR HEATING SYSTEMS

More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
Contact Us

AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS Chapter Index

To continue reading this air conditioning inspection guide, use links to the document chapters at left or below. Links shown in green font indicate where you are in this document.

  1. AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS
  2. A/C COMPONENTS
  3. CONTROLS & SWITCHES
  4. A/C DATA TAGS
  5. A/C TYPES, ENERGY SOURCES
  6. RATED COOLING CAPACITY
  7. SEER RATINGS
  8. A/C OPERATING COST
  9. SYSTEM OPERATION
  10. OPERATING TEMPERATURES
  11. OPERATING DEFECTS
  12. LOST COOLING CAPACITY
  13. COMPRESSOR CONDENSER
  14. AIR HANDLER UNIT
      DIRTY A/C BLOWERS
      DIRTY COOLING COIL
      FROST BUILD-UP
      BLOWER LEAKS, RUST & MOLD
      ADDING A/C: RETROFIT SIZING
  15. AIR FILTERS for HVAC SYSTEMS
  16. CONDENSATE HANDLING
  17. CLEANING A/C EQUIPMENT
  18. DUCT SYSTEM DEFECTS
  19. A/C REFRIGERANTS
  20. A/C REFRIGERANT LEAK DETECTION
  21. INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
  22. CRITICAL DEFECTS

Technical Reviewers

  • Thanks to Mark Cramer, Tampa Florida, for assistance in technical review of the "Critical Defects" section and for the photograph of the deteriorating gray Owens Corning flex duct in a hot attic. Mr. Cramer is a Florida home inspector and home inspection educator.
  • Thanks to Jon Bolton, an ASHI, FABI, and otherwise certified Florida home inspector who provided photos of failing Goodman gray flex duct in a hot attic.
  • Thanks to Alan Carson, Carson Dunlop, Associates, Toronto, for technical critique and for providing a copy of Carson Dunlop Weldon & Associates Technical Reference Guide to manufacturer's model and serial number information for heating and cooling equipment ($69.00 U.S.).
  • Wikipedia provided background information about the definition of HEPA and airborne particle interception.


AIR CONDITIONING SYSTEMS
A/C COMPONENTS
CONTROLS & SWITCHES
A/C DATA TAGS
A/C TYPES, ENERGY SOURCES
RATED COOLING CAPACITY
AIR CONDITIONER BTU CHART
SEER RATINGS
OPERATING COST
SYSTEM OPERATION
OPERATING TEMPERATURES
OPERATING DEFECTS
LOST COOLING CAPACITY
COMPRESSOR CONDENSER
AIR HANDLER UNIT
AIR FILTERS for HVAC SYSTEMS
CONDENSATE HANDLING
CLEANING & Legionella BACTERIA
DUCT SYSTEM DEFECTS
FAN AUTO ON CONTROLS
A/C REFRIGERANTS
A/C REFRIGERANT LEAK DETECTION
A/C DIAGNOSTIC FAQs
INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
CRITICAL DEFECTS
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
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Electrical
Environment
Exteriors
Heating
Home Inspection
Insulate Ventilate
Interiors
Mold Inspect/Test
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07/31/2007 - 01/31/2006 - Created 3/28/95 www.inspect-ny.com/aircond/ACRetrofit.htm - Web page design & content © 2007 Daniel Friedman All Rights Reserved