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#1
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Hello,
Have a forced hot air heating system, where the duct work is also used for the house air conditioning. Pretty typical setup: Condenser is outside the house, of course, and has two pipes running to the furnace where the Evaporator section of the A/C is. Furnace blower then bolws air thru the evap. section into the ductwork. "Plumbing" from the outside Condenser to the Evaporator is run thru the ceiling and walls. Might be a leak somewhere. It's not a very long run, but I really don't want to rip away part of the ceiling and wall to try and find. Thinking of having the A/C guy, or a Plumber just run new tubing on the bottom of the existing ceiling. Tubing would be exposed, but would paint. Question: good idea or approach ? Would this new tubing have to be insulated ? How ? BTW: are leaks in the connecting tubing fairly common after 20 years or so, or is nearly "always" a leak in the compressor or elsewhere in the actual A/C unit ? Thanks, Bob |
#2
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On Sun, 18 Jul 2010 11:36:40 -0400, Bob wrote:
Hello, Have a forced hot air heating system, where the duct work is also used for the house air conditioning. Pretty typical setup: Condenser is outside the house, of course, and has two pipes running to the furnace where the Evaporator section of the A/C is. Furnace blower then bolws air thru the evap. section into the ductwork. "Plumbing" from the outside Condenser to the Evaporator is run thru the ceiling and walls. Might be a leak somewhere. It's not a very long run, but I really don't want to rip away part of the ceiling and wall to try and find. Thinking of having the A/C guy, or a Plumber just run new tubing on the bottom of the existing ceiling. Tubing would be exposed, but would paint. Question: good idea or approach ? Would this new tubing have to be insulated ? How ? BTW: are leaks in the connecting tubing fairly common after 20 years or so, or is nearly "always" a leak in the compressor or elsewhere in the actual A/C unit ? Thanks, Bob The tubing leak is not common. More likely a leak in the A coil, the connections, or the condensing unit. Any competent tech can find a leak with today's tools of the trade. |
#3
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![]() "Bob" wrote It's not a very long run, but I really don't want to rip away part of the ceiling and wall to try and find. Thinking of having the A/C guy, or a Plumber just run new tubing on the bottom of the existing ceiling. Tubing would be exposed, but would paint. Question: good idea or approach ? Would this new tubing have to be insulated ? How ? BTW: are leaks in the connecting tubing fairly common after 20 years or so, or is nearly "always" a leak in the compressor or elsewhere in the actual A/C unit ? Not a good idea. Have an AC tech come out and find the leak, if that is the problem. It is not a simple matter of a plumber running new tubing as you would for water. He will have a leak detector and can probably pin-point the leak in a short time. Lines have to be evacuated and charged and must be done by a licensed operator. It may be something simple like a loose compression fitting and it is repaired and the system re-charged. Figure any house call is going to be $100 minimum though. Some jobs are best left to a pro. This is one of them. |
#4
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On Jul 18, 10:36*am, Bob wrote:
Hello, Have a forced hot air heating system, where the duct work is also used for the house air conditioning. Pretty typical setup: *Condenser is outside the house, of course, and has two pipes running to the furnace where the Evaporator section of the A/C is. Furnace blower then bolws air thru the evap. section into the ductwork. "Plumbing" from the outside Condenser to the Evaporator is run thru the ceiling and walls. Might be a leak somewhere. It's not a very long run, but I really don't want to rip away part of the ceiling and wall to try and find. Thinking of having the A/C guy, or a Plumber just run new tubing on the bottom of the existing ceiling. *Tubing would be exposed, but would paint. |
#5
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Bob wrote:
Hello, Have a forced hot air heating system, where the duct work is also used for the house air conditioning. Pretty typical setup: Condenser is outside the house, of course, and has two pipes running to the furnace where the Evaporator section of the A/C is. Furnace blower then bolws air thru the evap. section into the ductwork. "Plumbing" from the outside Condenser to the Evaporator is run thru the ceiling and walls. Might be a leak somewhere. It's not a very long run, but I really don't want to rip away part of the ceiling and wall to try and find. Thinking of having the A/C guy, or a Plumber just run new tubing on the bottom of the existing ceiling. Tubing would be exposed, but would paint. Question: good idea or approach ? Would this new tubing have to be insulated ? How ? BTW: are leaks in the connecting tubing fairly common after 20 years or so, or is nearly "always" a leak in the compressor or elsewhere in the actual A/C unit ? Thanks, Bob Hmmm, Why play with unqualified guess work. Call for service. They have leak sniffer. Don't assume anything. |
#6
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Leaking freon, or water?
The suction tube (large one) needs to be insulated, as it gets cold. It will condense water and drip. We need more information. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Bob" wrote in message ... Hello, Have a forced hot air heating system, where the duct work is also used for the house air conditioning. Pretty typical setup: Condenser is outside the house, of course, and has two pipes running to the furnace where the Evaporator section of the A/C is. Furnace blower then bolws air thru the evap. section into the ductwork. "Plumbing" from the outside Condenser to the Evaporator is run thru the ceiling and walls. Might be a leak somewhere. It's not a very long run, but I really don't want to rip away part of the ceiling and wall to try and find. Thinking of having the A/C guy, or a Plumber just run new tubing on the bottom of the existing ceiling. Tubing would be exposed, but would paint. Question: good idea or approach ? Would this new tubing have to be insulated ? How ? BTW: are leaks in the connecting tubing fairly common after 20 years or so, or is nearly "always" a leak in the compressor or elsewhere in the actual A/C unit ? Thanks, Bob |
#7
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AC refrigerant lines are some what different than water lines. For
example, refrigerant lines don't use compression fittings. You may have been thinking "flare" fittings. Easy misteak to mayk. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus www.lds.org .. "Ed Pawlowski" wrote in message ... Not a good idea. Have an AC tech come out and find the leak, if that is the problem. It is not a simple matter of a plumber running new tubing as you would for water. He will have a leak detector and can probably pin-point the leak in a short time. Lines have to be evacuated and charged and must be done by a licensed operator. It may be something simple like a loose compression fitting and it is repaired and the system re-charged. Figure any house call is going to be $100 minimum though. Some jobs are best left to a pro. This is one of them. |
#8
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On Jul 18, 6:00*pm, "Stormin Mormon"
wrote: Leaking freon, or water? The suction tube (large one) needs to be insulated, as it gets cold. It will condense water and drip. We need more information. -- Christopher A. Young Learn more about Jesus *www.lds.org . "Bob" wrote in message ... Hello, Have a forced hot air heating system, where the duct work is also used for the house air conditioning. Pretty typical setup: *Condenser is outside the house, of course, and has two pipes running to the furnace where the Evaporator section of the A/C is. Furnace blower then bolws air thru the evap. section into the ductwork. "Plumbing" from the outside Condenser to the Evaporator is run thru the ceiling and walls. Might be a leak somewhere. It's not a very long run, but I really don't want to rip away part of the ceiling and wall to try and find. Thinking of having the A/C guy, or a Plumber just run new tubing on the bottom of the existing ceiling. *Tubing would be exposed, but would paint. Question: *good idea or approach ? Would this new tubing have to be insulated ? *How ? BTW: *are leaks in the connecting tubing fairly common after 20 years or so, or is nearly "always" a leak in the compressor or elsewhere in the actual A/C unit ? Thanks, Bob If the tubing in question is part of a 20+ year old system that isn't working right, I'd say it's time to evaluate getting a whole new system. Between Fed tax credit of 30%, various state, utility and or manufacturer rebates, plus savings on energy, it could be better than putting money into an old inefficient unit who;s days are numbered. |
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