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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
AIR FILTERS for HVAC SYSTEMS
CONDENSATE HANDLING
CLEANING & Legionella BACTERIA
DUCT SYSTEM DEFECTS
A/C REFRIGERANTS
A/C DIAGNOSTIC FAQs
INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
CRITICAL DEFECTS
Air Conditioning "How To" Books

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Photograph of  Outside Compressor Condenser Unit of a modern air conditioning system Types of Air Conditioning Systems & A/C energy sources
AirCondAPedia ©

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This website answers most questions about inspecting, troubleshooting, and repairing central air conditioning systems.

  • Air conditioning system energy source options
  • Types of air conditioning systems
  • Photos & description of components of residential central air conditioning equipment
  • Photos & description of components of ductless and commercial air conditioning systems
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 website answers most questions about air conditioning systems. We describe how to inspect residential air conditioning systems (A/C systems) to inform home buyers, owners, and home inspectors of common cooling system defects. We continue to add to and update this text as new details are provided. 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 the links at page left to navigate this document or to go to Other Website Topics. Green links at left show where you are in our document & website.

A/C ENERGY SOURCES - Air Conditioning System Type by Energy Source

Air conditioning systems use these common energy sources to physically cool the condensing coils and thus the refrigerant

  • Air-cooled air conditioners (shown in the photo): this refers to the use of air to cool the compressor and the condenser coil used to return the refrigerant gas to a liquid state. These split systems usually have an inside evaporator cooling coil installed to work along with the blower and duct system which might also be sitting atop a heating furnace. The outside half of the equipment contains the compressor and condenser coil.
  • Water cooled air conditioning systems: these work in a manner similar to the system listed above, but use water as a chiller to remove heat from the high temperature gas in the (usually but not always outside) compressor/condenser unit.
  • Gas Chillers: these systems operate by the same principles as the above units, but they use heat to cause the refrigerant gas to change states rather than compression and expansion by a compressor motor. (Some refrigerators, including ones used in recreational vehicles also operate on this principle, as they can cool without requiring electricity to operate a compressor. Ammonia was the traditional gas used for this type of system.)

Photographs of Types of Air Conditioning Systems

Photos of Typical Residential Central Air Conditioning System

Photograph of the air handler unit or AHU for a typical up-flow residential air handler unit providing air conditioning Photograph of a typical residential air conditioning compressor condenser unit, an older model, with a few visible defects and concerns Photograph of Owens Corning flex duct - which deteriorates and fails in hot spaces

The most common central residential air conditioning system incorporates an indoor air handler unit or AHU which draws building air through return ducts from the living space, cools it by moving the air across an evaporator coil, and sends cooled and dehumidified air back into the living area through supply ducts and registers. Liquid refrigerant is released into the interior of the evaporator coil, changing its state from liquid to gas and thereby cooling the evaporator coil (which in turn cools and dehumidifies air which is blown across the coil). Refrigerant used to cool the evaporator coil runs in independent piping, usually copper, from the evaporator coil outside to a compressor and condenser unit where the refrigerant is repressurized, cooled, and returned back inside to the evaporator coil as a liquid. The photos here show a basement AHU, an outdoor compressor/condenser, and flex-duct in an attic.

In the left photo, the basement AHU has been retrofitted with an air conditioning unit which by simple inspection is probably improperly designed and mis-matched to the size and air flow character of the original air handler - notice how the A/C plenum is much larger than the blower compartment.

In the right photo the compressor unit looks OK on casual inspection but there seems to be no pad, the unit is slightly tipped, and while we can't see the refrigerant lines, that taut electrical wire makes me wonder if there is a lack of extra slack (a loop) in the refrigerant lines to permit movement - a refrigerant leak and system failure may be coming soon.

In the third photo, this particular flex duct product, one previously produced by Owens Corning(R) is defective and disintegrates on exposure to hot areas. [Owens Corning flex duct failure photo courtesy of Mark Cramer Tampa FL]

Photos of the Attic Air Handler Unit for Central Air Conditioning

Photograph of the air handler unit or AHU for a typical residential attic air handler installationunit for central air conditioning

Attic air conditioning equipment for residential air conditioning systems includes an air handler unit such as the one shown in this photo, combined with an outside comprssor/condensor such as the one shown earlier above. Attic-mounted central air equipment may have different defects and problems than a similar unit located in a lower building floor or basement. The residential central air conditionoing equipment components are the same in an attic unit as a typical basement unit except that they are arranged horizontally rather than vertically.

Photos of Independent Systems or Ductless Air Conditioning or Heat Pumps

Photograph of the indoor evaporator and fan unit for a wall-mounted Sanyo split system air residential conditioner Photograph of the outdoor condenser and compressor unit for the wall-mounted Sanyo split system air residential conditioner shown here

Ductless air conditioning systems do not make use of an air handler connected to duct work to distribute conditioned air the for central cooling and/or heating. These include ductless systems mounted on roofs or in attics and wall-mounted units (shown here) which may typically an indoor fan and evaporator coil to produce cooled and dehumidified air, but which route refrigerant to an outside compressor/condenser unit.

Photos of Wall convector units for heating and air conditioning

Photograph of wall convector heating and cooling system

Wall convectors are often used for both heating and cooling in commercial installations and high-rise apartment buildings. The unit shown has its own compressor mounted right in the cabinet, visible at lower center in the photo. Wall-mounted heating and cooling convector installations may be designed with one central heater or cooling system which feeds multiple units with chilled or heated water or possibly refrigerant from a single remote heating and cooling heat pump. Another common residential alternative dispenses with duct work entirely, using a wall-mounted indoor evaporator/blower unit and a separate outside compressor/condenser. In this latter split design, one compressor/condenser may serve multiple wall-mount indoor units.

Photos of Commercial rooftop-mounted combined air conditioning or heat pump units

Photograph of commercial rooftop mounted A/C system

Rooftop mounted central air conditioning systems may include both the cooling unit (evaporator coil, blower fan, filters) and the compressor/condenser unit in one package. Rooftop mounted central cooling systems may be smaller packaged systems which blow their cool air down directly into the cooled space through an opening in the roof, drawing return air from a nearby location, or the rooftop cooling system may be connected to duct work which in turn blows down into multiple building areas to deliver cool air, drawing return air from one or more centralized returns. In many commercial installations, the entire area over a suspended ceiling may serve as one giant return plenum through which pass the supply ducts, delivering air to individual supply registers.

While the list above describes the common components of a typical residential air conditioning system, other configurations and packaged units are also in increased use in both residential and commercial installations. Alternative designs may combine all components except for the duct work in a rooftop mounted unit such as the one shown above where it was mounted on a flat roof over offices at a commercial building.

Photos of Window or Wall-Mounted or Portable Room Air Conditioners

Photograph of a window mounted A/C system Photograph of the outside portion of a window mounted A/C system

The window-mounted air conditioner in these photographs is a small 8,000 BTUh unit but it was installed in a strategic location at the top of a second floor stair. It is able to cool the entire second floor of this home (one large, very well-insulated room) and additional cool air flows down the stairwell to also deliver cool and dehumidified air to the lower floor of this home. The photo of the exterior of this unit shows that there has been some damage to the cooling fins of the condensing coil on the back of the unit, but not enough to warrant action.

Photos of a Home Made Central Air Conditioning System

Photograph of  this unusual attic air conditioning system is an example of the range of human creativity observed during a career of building inspections Do-It-Yourself Home made air conditioning systems can produce some systems that seem to cool the building but at high cost and with building damage, such as this goofy example may actually work but not without problems. This system used a window air conditioner placed in a home's attic. Manhole ventilation duct (liberated from New York City) was used along with a home made hood attached to the air conditioner to blow cool air into the home through a ceiling register. The air conditioning condensate was collected in the blue plastic kiddie pool seen in the photo, and drained by gravity to a plumbing vent stack. Nothing about the system was proper, safe, nor very effective, and in addition, the attic moisture conditions were terrible as you can see from the blackened plywood roof sheathing. The system was admirable for its creativity however.

Other home made cooling systems such as evaporative coolers using a simple pan of water in front of a window fan can be effective and inexpensive in hot dry climates such as the southwestern United States.







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
A/C REFRIGERANTS
A/C DIAGNOSTIC FAQs
INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
CRITICAL DEFECTS
Air Conditioning "How To" Books
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. INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
  9. A/C OPERATING COST
  10. SYSTEM OPERATION
  11. OPERATING TEMPERATURES
  12. OPERATING DEFECTS
  13. LOST COOLING CAPACITY
  14. COMPRESSOR CONDENSER
  15. AIR HANDLER UNIT
  16. AIR FILTERS for HVAC SYSTEMS
  17. CONDENSATE HANDLING
  18. CLEANING A/C EQUIPMENT
  19. DUCT SYSTEM DEFECTS
  20. A/C REFRIGERANTS
  21. 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.).
  • Thanks to Scott at SJM Inspect for suggesting this EPA document and for technical editing remarks regarding our air conditioning website, SJM Inspection Service LLC, serves the entire state of CT, sjminspect.com 203-543-0447 or 203-877-4774 5/16/07
  • Reference: Modern Refrigeration and Air Conditioning, A. D. Althouse, C.H. Turnquist, A. Bracciano, Goodheart-Willcox Co., 1982
  • Reference: Principles of Refrigeration, R. Warren Marsh, C. Thomas Olivo, Delmar Publishers, 1979


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
A/C REFRIGERANTS
A/C DIAGNOSTIC FAQs
INSPECTION LIMITATIONS
CRITICAL DEFECTS
More Information

InspectAPedia TM Home & Site Map
Air Conditioning
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Environment
Exteriors
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Home Inspection
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05/28/07 - 01/31/2006 - Created 3/28/95 www.inspect-ny.com/aircond/aircond05.htm - Web page design & content © 2007 Daniel Friedman All Rights Reserved