I think a lot of people watch your videos because of your humility, being able to see your "live" troubleshooting and your train of thought. Keep up the great work and stay safe!
You know what you are doing. You are helping others with your knowledge without charge, what the hell do people want? You speak plenty clear, anybody who wants to fuss over slight errors in terminology is just a hater or jealous.
Being on top of that roof @ 100 degrees you might slip up on some proper terminology. While working on those units you have a lot going through your mind. I’m sure 99.99% of the people that watch and comment on your channel totally appreciate what you do. I’ve learn more on your channel than anywhere. Thank you Chris!
@@themonkeyspaw7359 you have a very strange name. Did you name your account after the mythical object of legend? If so, was it the cursed or cleansed version? P. S. Yes, that was the meme I referenced.
Those who can’t do teach. That teacher couldn’t fix an AC unit if his life depended on it. You keep up the amazing work. You are teaching by example! And it is amazing!
A lot of TH-cam channels that started out excellent and then ended up being just good, are the ones which used to show their mistakes and then stopped. Mistakes are where the learning happens, so seeing the mistake helps a lot.
Finally someone has the balls to call out these hidden agendas by deceitful sales talk BY manufacturers!! Great job with the transformer and locating the short and testing the system before part replacement OR unit replacement YOUR Professional and A GEM !!
TBF to you I really wouldn't want my daily jobs video'd and picked apart second by second from YT warriors . Your work is of an extremely high standard and worthy of the best. Of the American techs, I only watch you and HVACTime . What I've seen of the others (I've watched) I wouldn't want them to park on my drive let alone get their tools out. The double row thing caught me out some 20 years ago on a Daikin VRV condenser. looked clean on the outside and in but was tripping on high head.. Pulled them apart and it looked like someone had slipped some carpet tiles in there.. great work keep on keeping on
It's so cool to me that you encourage your staff to slow down and take their time to do the job thoroughly, not just "right". Too many companies are turn and burn operations running on quantity over quality.
I have been in this business for 20 years and you a better job than most. I have never seen anyone ever separate condenser coils. Not even the manufacturer. A trainer complaining about your wording... Keep doing what your doing.
I own a large commercial kitchen. I started watching you videos to help me understand how things brake so i can give better feed back to tech's who fix my equipment. It has even helped me fix a few small things that i would of probably payed 10x as much to get some one to come take a look at.
they may say replace the whole unit but i'm like this i'd rather rebuild as it keeps things out of scrap yards and land fills, you do wonderful work Chris and please keep sharing
4:18 One great tool to test transformers is an resistance measurement tool which uses AC instead of DC. If any wires are shorted internally, the AC resistance on any coil drops, while only the shorted coil has an DC resistance drop. An ESR measurement tool is great
I’ve been waiting and learning from your videos for at least 3 years and for you to know what Damn Gina is from, does my heart good and have made my day lol.
I don’t even work in the HVAC industry- ok I have a electrical / electronic background, but I understand you just fine. Keep doing what your doing buddy, I’ve learnt more about your industry since lock down than I ever thought I would just watching your channel.
I thank you for your ramblings. It shows your big picture thinking. Your big picture process has helped me so much. I’m a facilities manager and my property is in the middle of no where. It’s hard to get a company out to us. Following your videos has helped me so much in troubleshooting my equipment! Please keep the videos coming!
Kindness is always something that is more needed for everyone. Kindness starts with me and I have to hold myself personally accountable each and every day. I respect those who show me acts of kindness and try to return my kindness to them. If you don't show me your kindness then I will try to show my kindness to them.
We do need more kindness. If we all worked on loving our neighbors and ourselves, a massive portion of the division in our country would not exist. On another note, I finally found the hose wand you use in stock! It’s the perfect setup for me, but nobody has had them for months in my area.
Hi Chris, I found your videos a month ago and it has been a blast watching them! I'm a maintenance person for a hotel so these videos help me with basic cleaning and troubleshooting for my ice machines, coolers/freezers, and HVAC units.
Martin is the 90s sitcom you were looking for haha... Love the videos, I've been watching since the beginning, livestreams and overtime shows too, you share so much knowledge and dont hold back in a very grounded unbiased way with no agenda other than helping us techs out here in the real world. Your content has made me a better technician and I try and pass these lessons to my trainees. Thank you so much for all your generosity!
First time leaving a comment, but you asked to leave a comment if we made it to the end of your videos. While I don’t ever see myself working on AC units, I find your videos oddly relaxing and informative. Anyway, appreciate your sharing your insights and expertise.
I don't always make it to the end of the rant section, but I always make it to the end of the technical things. I'm not an HVAC person (at least not in a professional capacity), but your troubleshooting skills are top-notch and that transfers to a lot of things and makes these videos excellent.
I’m sure he prefaced that statement with “I’ve been doing this 30 years…” I didn’t learn HVAC until I worked for a distributor, and since then I’ve taken numerous factory and online training classes including a NATE certification and your videos contain by far the most helpful/resourceful/useful information out of them all.
I'm grateful for these videos man... I've absorbed so much from your "ramblings" while "talking to yourself" about topics I've always wondered about 😁... I hope you keep it up... Ignore the pedantics.
Finally got AC in the home. Thinking very fondly of all fitters and technicians right now - been staying indoors for two days just to enjoy the cool! 💙 Sleep and work focus improved noticeably.
I absolutely love your videos, been watching for years now! One thing that I continue to struggle with, that I find is never brought up is explaining to the customer little details and making them feel comfortable. I know you can’t record conversations but even in this video, I would love to see how you explained working so long on a unit and realize there’s a slight restriction after the fact. Very common situation that I still don’t always have a good way of explaining and having the confidence while in conversation. Anyways thank you for everything you do!! Keep kicking ass!
im tempted after watching these and knowing a lot, To setup my own air con for my shed that is a house to some servers. Lots of heat is made in there and needs to be cooled. Now iv watched these for about a year. Id probably feel better setting one up than i would of just watching a video on youtube
Your correct on the repair vs replace part. I work in schools and if we have to replace certain things it requires we bring so many other things to new code. So we repair as long as we can, until a remodel.
Your statement about needing more kindness is right on! Sometimes it seems like it's in short supply. I think people watch your videos because you are talking to the tech. Guys out there just trying their best to do a job well and it doesn't matter if you mess up sometimes. We all do. Experience is a good teacher. And you have that. It's always good to know the "got chas" before you start a job.
Always watch to the end. I've been in the business 40 years and still pickup tips & tricks from you. Great content brother. I use your vids to train my guys.
of course your video is helping a lot for diagnostic and repair and maintenance, cheers . , i think that is the easiest part at least for me to find the problems, , but at the end of the day my biggest challenge is to confront the customer for estimate and cost $$$, I love that time and I hate that time .
Great Video. I work at a University as a Maintenance guy. I have guys that I call out to service or troubleshot units like this one and your videos are super helpful.
If i ever told my company I need that kind of time to clean a unit they would lose they're freaking minds. The down side of being 95% install focused with way WAAY too much work being under bid.. your videos do help me to refresh my mind on troubleshooting so I appreciate that dude.
I am a technician in hvac-r. I like what you do and could see the unit that was being shown. Carrier is a tuff system. I hate splitting the condenser. It a mess to deal with, but when done right you will get high praise by the customer and that makes everything worse it.
These videos are gems for the community man we watch them because they help us. You help us and the normal non jealous people understand you make some mistakes but they are so minor in the grand scheme of things it’s almost not even worth mentioning except to just clarify for the ones that don’t know
Good video , you are wright every one makes mistakes out there and no one knows it all. I went to hvac school and your videos teach new techs allot. Thanks
Anyone can learn a lot from your troubleshooting style. Not making assumptions based on prior experience is THE hardest habit to break - Especially when you're getting driven to complete more jobs in a given day. I'm retired, 70+ years old and I learn stuff from you every video that you produce! It doesn't make me any money, but it sure helps me work on my own stuff! And in my experience, you're the ONLY tech I've seen anywhere who advocates splitting the outside coil for proper cleaning on residential systems. I have one 4 and one 5 ton heat pump, and both have dual coils. I haven't bothered to split them yet because I live in the desert away from most industrial and freeway hydrocarbon contamination and the head pressures have never (yet) been high that I couldn't explain. But in your area it would be crazy not to. The amount of hydrocarbon contamination from the freeways alone in Southern California is staggering.
I always watch your videos the whole way through because you are a treasure trove of information and experience. Seriously Chris, you are the best dude
Hi Chris, I always watch to the end as, I would imagine, do most of your viewers. That rub out on the condenser looked about 4-5mm, soooo luckily it didn't hit the copper. Cheers for all the great videos and the time it takes to edit and do all the stuff needed, Thank you.
Chris thanks for taking the time to produce this videos, I love them and I have learned a lot from them, they really shows the real world of hvac work on the field good for everyone who wants to be a good technician. Thanks your family for allowing you to help others grow in this trade.
Some of the Trane RTU's have 3 row condenser coils. One of the benefits of microchannel is that it's only a single coil. Even mini splits and VRF units have multi-row condenser coils. Here in the NE the cottonwood, which happens in June will plug them up solid. Ice machines definitely take 4-5 hours to clean properly. They aren't the easiest to service or work on. Lots of tubing to remove and little parts and pieces. Cleaning and sanitizing has to be done in separate steps and 30-45 minute cycles for each.
I have a trane Intellipak I work on that is a two row micro channel coils deep on the condenser with about 2 inches between the coils. I'm still trying to figure out how to clean it well.
@@bflugan - Think of a lawn sprinkler. Long tube with nozzles in a row. You might have to make it yourself, but aluminum tubing isn't horribly expensive. Make an L shape (more than one?), put holes in one direction. Use that to slide between the coils.
Holy dust bunny's Bat man! Lol you said " unit needs a little love " Boy you gave it a whole lotta love. ( led zeppelin 's is better though..) it definitely needed. Keep up the great work, nd as my uncle Marino would say " Jimmy if it were easy ,we'd have girls in mini skirts doing it." May he R.I.P., dont think you could say that today anywhere,without offending someone. Appreciate your time with the diagnosis, editing, nd up loading of the video.
I make it to the end of all your vids. I like and enjoy them. Thank you for all the great work you do. I have learned so much. I do 3 or 5 residential ACs a year and your hvavr has given me some tips to help. Again thank you for being you ❤️
You do a great job at explaining things. We all make mistakes but that's what makes us human. You do excellent work on troubleshooting, finding the main source of the issue and fixing it. Great job man 👍
Manufacturers won‘t tell you how to fully clean their Units. Properly cleaning these condensers means the unit will function much longer than the warranty period lasts. This leads to decreased sales of either replacement parts or whole new units.
How much training from the manufacturer do you need to clean a condenser? What kind of training do your apprentices do before getting there ticket serriously its ridiculous to blame the manufacturers for something the industry teaches you on day 1.
Gonna say straight up, as a residential tech, no tune up includes splitting double layered condenser coils. In fact, the vast majority of those tune ups will not even include stripping the outside cages on condensers. Realistically we clean from the outside and blow in (and you are lucky to have foam cleaner used), not from a lack of knowledge but because customers don't want to pay what it costs as part of a tune up nor is it usually needed. If people complain about $75-$100 dollar tune-ups they certainly won't pay for $200-$300 dollar tune-ups. That being said, when it is needed based on your tech's experience and/or there is an issue being caused....we do have charges for foam cleaning, for removing the outer jacket of condensers, for completely stripping a condenser and cleaning the outside and inside, and yes even for splitting double coils. So don't be surprised if your tech randomly comes up and brings up a higher dollar amount for a cleaning, and don't give him the "well no one else had to do that and it is working fine" line. It takes a lot of time to properly strip and clean condensers, especially depending on the manufacturer...so we gotta charge for that time.
You are correct. The condenser coil supposed to be split to clean it. The biggest problem I have with older AC units is leaks. I have the hardest time finding a leak on a good working unit.
When you started bump starting the unit, my battery backups in my room clicked. It confused the heck out of me! I just happened to have a power glitch at the moment Chris pushed in the contactor. 🤣🤣🤣
I always make it to the end of the video. Great 👍 video as always, thanks for making HVAC/R better with all the knowledge and advices you provide to this amazing career.
Made to the end thank you for making the videos. I had to replace a compressor on a 21 year old carrier because I could not get unit. I use to live in San Diego I understand how California is . Nice to live but expensive with a lot epa rules.
I'd like to extend a big thank you for how much your videos are helping me turn into the tech I want to be. I find nobody wants to take the time to show their apprentices anything on site anymore. Not that I'm asking for much hand holding... It'd just be nice to know that I'm on the right track. Anyways, thank you so much for putting up these videos. I hope to be as knowledgeable as you one day.
Hey Cris, made it to the end and wanted to say thank you for the videos, even though the teacher was upset I’m sure any one in the trade knows what you are saying and even if it is said wrong we are all thinking it and probably don’t catch it haha. Thanks again keep up the good work and BTW love the march
To many people go to school for the trades and get taught the correct terms for things butbhave no clue or means of how to repair or diagnose why something broke. Any tech can swap parts... To trully understand how to correct a problem and prevent future problems is what seperate the good tech from the part swappers. That being said contuing to educate your self in your chosen trade will always be beneficial. Great videos
Big thumbs up on not using aftermarket junk condenser fan motors, we have been burned lots of times as a company trying to save the customer company, way better off just using factory parts in the long run
22:15 Isn't there some kind of valve you can turn to adjust superheat? (According to my Google search there is, but I don't know a lot about how this works.)
7:43 cause it's an ongoing issue from the looks of those fuses sitting in front of board, and someone just kept changing fuses, probably going to find an oversized fuse
The big gash in the condenser coil is common on those. It’s from the zip ties holding the coil together rotting out and breaking. Or guys will split to clean them and then leave the zip ties off. Eventually that top pass on the coil will rub out against the top of the unit and blow the charge.
There's no perfect person in the world. We learn by our own mistakes or were supported to any ways. Great job. That's how I was taught my dad said your going to learn all your life just don't give up is all I use that theory . You can read any book on any thing out there on how to do something hands on your going to find out they dont give you every thing. lol.😊
Hey Chris, I always watch to the end, because a lot of times you'll explain things in the video in a little more detail. I am an electrician that converted to an ac technician, and I do notice the mistakes in terminology, but it doesn't bother me. I guess you'd have to be somewhat petty to really be bothered by it, which says a lot about that teacher at the convention. Continuity is really just a lack of resistance anyway, so no big deal there. Great video!
I do watch your videos to the end. sometimes twice, when i do fall asleep (my time nightma..gement is bad, so I do have a little bite of time before sleep) stay cool ;-)
Fuck the haters man. The information you share via this channel has likely helped thousands. I know it's certainly helped me. And of course nobody is perfect. Just know that you are appreciated bro.
I usually find a short over between the panels by the evap coil. I always pull those coils apart, usually no one else does and its always gummed up with cottonwood.
i am a regular joe, i have no clue what you are doing. but i always watch til the end.
i admire your thoroughness and professionalism.👍
I think a lot of people watch your videos because of your humility, being able to see your "live" troubleshooting and your train of thought. Keep up the great work and stay safe!
You know what you are doing. You are helping others with your knowledge without charge, what the hell do people want? You speak plenty clear, anybody who wants to fuss over slight errors in terminology is just a hater or jealous.
Very well put! Chris is a very generous with his knowledge and all around great guy !
Being on top of that roof @ 100 degrees you might slip up on some proper terminology. While working on those units you have a lot going through your mind. I’m sure 99.99% of the people that watch and comment on your channel totally appreciate what you do. I’ve learn more on your channel than anywhere. Thank you Chris!
I believe you are referencing the deadly laser in the sky called “the Sun”.
@@BlueNEXUSGaming THE SUN IS A DEADLY LASER.
@@themonkeyspaw7359 you have a very strange name. Did you name your account after the mythical object of legend? If so, was it the cursed or cleansed version?
P. S. Yes, that was the meme I referenced.
Those who can’t do teach. That teacher couldn’t fix an AC unit if his life depended on it. You keep up the amazing work. You are teaching by example! And it is amazing!
A lot of TH-cam channels that started out excellent and then ended up being just good, are the ones which used to show their mistakes and then stopped. Mistakes are where the learning happens, so seeing the mistake helps a lot.
Chris. I talk to myself all the time too dude. I find it’s a lot easier to troubleshoot when I talk to myself. It’s healthy
Finally someone has the balls to call out these hidden agendas by deceitful sales talk BY manufacturers!! Great job with the transformer and locating the short and testing the system before part replacement OR unit replacement YOUR Professional and A GEM !!
TBF to you I really wouldn't want my daily jobs video'd and picked apart second by second from YT warriors . Your work is of an extremely high standard and worthy of the best. Of the American techs, I only watch you and HVACTime . What I've seen of the others (I've watched) I wouldn't want them to park on my drive let alone get their tools out.
The double row thing caught me out some 20 years ago on a Daikin VRV condenser. looked clean on the outside and in but was tripping on high head.. Pulled them apart and it looked like someone had slipped some carpet tiles in there.. great work keep on keeping on
Thanks for the nice words and I agree Holden from HVAC Time is a great dude!
It's so cool to me that you encourage your staff to slow down and take their time to do the job thoroughly, not just "right". Too many companies are turn and burn operations running on quantity over quality.
I have been in this business for 20 years and you a better job than most. I have never seen anyone ever separate condenser coils. Not even the manufacturer. A trainer complaining about your wording... Keep doing what your doing.
I own a large commercial kitchen. I started watching you videos to help me understand how things brake so i can give better feed back to tech's who fix my equipment. It has even helped me fix a few small things that i would of probably payed 10x as much to get some one to come take a look at.
they may say replace the whole unit but i'm like this i'd rather rebuild as it keeps things out of scrap yards and land fills, you do wonderful work Chris and please keep sharing
Chris: "I have my little phrases."
Me: "It's been 84 years since I've heard him say 'CHNGUS' "
4:18 One great tool to test transformers is an resistance measurement tool which uses AC instead of DC.
If any wires are shorted internally, the AC resistance on any coil drops, while only the shorted coil has an DC resistance drop.
An ESR measurement tool is great
I’ve been waiting and learning from your videos for at least 3 years and for you to know what Damn Gina is from, does my heart good and have made my day lol.
Ha ha one of the funniest shows I watched growing up!!
I don’t even work in the HVAC industry- ok I have a electrical / electronic background, but I understand you just fine. Keep doing what your doing buddy, I’ve learnt more about your industry since lock down than I ever thought I would just watching your channel.
I thank you for your ramblings. It shows your big picture thinking. Your big picture process has helped me so much. I’m a facilities manager and my property is in the middle of no where. It’s hard to get a company out to us. Following your videos has helped me so much in troubleshooting my equipment! Please keep the videos coming!
Kindness is always something that is more needed for everyone. Kindness starts with me and I have to hold myself personally accountable each and every day. I respect those who show me acts of kindness and try to return my kindness to them. If you don't show me your kindness then I will try to show my kindness to them.
We do need more kindness. If we all worked on loving our neighbors and ourselves, a massive portion of the division in our country would not exist. On another note, I finally found the hose wand you use in stock! It’s the perfect setup for me, but nobody has had them for months in my area.
Hi Chris, I found your videos a month ago and it has been a blast watching them! I'm a maintenance person for a hotel so these videos help me with basic cleaning and troubleshooting for my ice machines, coolers/freezers, and HVAC units.
Couldn't agree more with you Chris. Hopefully this bring more awareness to factory to give real maintenance information.
Martin is the 90s sitcom you were looking for haha... Love the videos, I've been watching since the beginning, livestreams and overtime shows too, you share so much knowledge and dont hold back in a very grounded unbiased way with no agenda other than helping us techs out here in the real world. Your content has made me a better technician and I try and pass these lessons to my trainees. Thank you so much for all your generosity!
First time leaving a comment, but you asked to leave a comment if we made it to the end of your videos. While I don’t ever see myself working on AC units, I find your videos oddly relaxing and informative. Anyway, appreciate your sharing your insights and expertise.
Thanks so much for watching!
I don't always make it to the end of the rant section, but I always make it to the end of the technical things. I'm not an HVAC person (at least not in a professional capacity), but your troubleshooting skills are top-notch and that transfers to a lot of things and makes these videos excellent.
I almost shit my pants when you grabbed those 200v connectors on the transformer with your bare fingers
I saw that too. Grab one wire and not ground yourself you’ll be fine…. Still I wouldn’t do it.
that's 2 of us
They're insulated, it'll be fine (;
@@laskahvac666 That's what I thought too. I remember the feeling all too well
😭 I thought the exact same thing I got up and looked closer at the tv
I do mostly resi stuff and minimal light commercial, but I have been learning so much from these vids! Thanks so much
I’m sure he prefaced that statement with “I’ve been doing this 30 years…” I didn’t learn HVAC until I worked for a distributor, and since then I’ve taken numerous factory and online training classes including a NATE certification and your videos contain by far the most helpful/resourceful/useful information out of them all.
I'm grateful for these videos man... I've absorbed so much from your "ramblings" while "talking to yourself" about topics I've always wondered about 😁... I hope you keep it up... Ignore the pedantics.
Finally got AC in the home. Thinking very fondly of all fitters and technicians right now - been staying indoors for two days just to enjoy the cool! 💙 Sleep and work focus improved noticeably.
I absolutely love your videos, been watching for years now! One thing that I continue to struggle with, that I find is never brought up is explaining to the customer little details and making them feel comfortable. I know you can’t record conversations but even in this video, I would love to see how you explained working so long on a unit and realize there’s a slight restriction after the fact. Very common situation that I still don’t always have a good way of explaining and having the confidence while in conversation. Anyways thank you for everything you do!! Keep kicking ass!
Thats from the show Martin! Made in 1990s! I dont remember much from that show, but he used to say it to his girlfriend/wife i believe!
DAMN GINA! LOL
@@Lewdacris916 I cant remember names or birthdays but I can remember quotes from sitcoms lmao
im tempted after watching these and knowing a lot, To setup my own air con for my shed that is a house to some servers. Lots of heat is made in there and needs to be cooled. Now iv watched these for about a year. Id probably feel better setting one up than i would of just watching a video on youtube
Your correct on the repair vs replace part. I work in schools and if we have to replace certain things it requires we bring so many other things to new code. So we repair as long as we can, until a remodel.
Your statement about needing more kindness is right on! Sometimes it seems like it's in short supply. I think people watch your videos because you are talking to the tech. Guys out there just trying their best to do a job well and it doesn't matter if you mess up sometimes. We all do. Experience is a good teacher. And you have that. It's always good to know the "got chas" before you start a job.
Always watch to the end. I've been in the business 40 years and still pickup tips & tricks from you. Great content brother. I use your vids to train my guys.
of course your video is helping a lot for diagnostic and repair and maintenance, cheers . , i think that is the easiest part at least for me to find the problems, , but at the end of the day my biggest challenge is to confront the customer for estimate and cost $$$, I love that time and I hate that time .
Great Video. I work at a University as a Maintenance guy. I have guys that I call out to service or troubleshot units like this one and your videos are super helpful.
You're just so exceptional, your explanatory method is just so simple and clear .
If i ever told my company I need that kind of time to clean a unit they would lose they're freaking minds. The down side of being 95% install focused with way WAAY too much work being under bid.. your videos do help me to refresh my mind on troubleshooting so I appreciate that dude.
Hey Martin thank you for sharing and love how you teach your community. Love the troubleshooting vids on refrigeration and commercial HVAC equipment.
I am a technician in hvac-r. I like what you do and could see the unit that was being shown. Carrier is a tuff system. I hate splitting the condenser. It a mess to deal with, but when done right you will get high praise by the customer and that makes everything worse it.
Great video Chris! You are the hardest working technician...so thorough and conscientious!
These videos are gems for the community man we watch them because they help us. You help us and the normal non jealous people understand you make some mistakes but they are so minor in the grand scheme of things it’s almost not even worth mentioning except to just clarify for the ones that don’t know
Good video , you are wright every one makes mistakes out there and no one knows it all. I went to hvac school and your videos teach new techs allot. Thanks
Anyone can learn a lot from your troubleshooting style. Not making assumptions based on prior experience is THE hardest habit to break - Especially when you're getting driven to complete more jobs in a given day. I'm retired, 70+ years old and I learn stuff from you every video that you produce! It doesn't make me any money, but it sure helps me work on my own stuff!
And in my experience, you're the ONLY tech I've seen anywhere who advocates splitting the outside coil for proper cleaning on residential systems. I have one 4 and one 5 ton heat pump, and both have dual coils. I haven't bothered to split them yet because I live in the desert away from most industrial and freeway hydrocarbon contamination and the head pressures have never (yet) been high that I couldn't explain. But in your area it would be crazy not to. The amount of hydrocarbon contamination from the freeways alone in Southern California is staggering.
Really enjoy the content, really hope you don't stop..the big picture..thank you Chris..
You say your not a trainer but I've learned a chit ton from you. Thanks for the content bro.
First time viewer. Made it to the end of the video. Agreed we need more kindness. I tip my hat to you on knowing how to fix equipment. Very awesome.
Dude I'm not even in HVACR, like I have a passing interest, and I have watched literally all your videos. it's like background ASMR
I always watch your videos the whole way through because you are a treasure trove of information and experience. Seriously Chris, you are the best dude
Hi Chris, I always watch to the end as, I would imagine, do most of your viewers. That rub out on the condenser looked about 4-5mm, soooo luckily it didn't hit the copper.
Cheers for all the great videos and the time it takes to edit and do all the stuff needed, Thank you.
I strive to be a great tech like you are one day. I learn something new everytime I watch your videos. Thank you so much for everything you do. 😃
Chris thanks for taking the time to produce this videos, I love them and I have learned a lot from them, they really shows the real world of hvac work on the field good for everyone who wants to be a good technician. Thanks your family for allowing you to help others grow in this trade.
I made it to the end and I appreciate your efforts. Please continue
Some of the Trane RTU's have 3 row condenser coils. One of the benefits of microchannel is that it's only a single coil. Even mini splits and VRF units have multi-row condenser coils. Here in the NE the cottonwood, which happens in June will plug them up solid.
Ice machines definitely take 4-5 hours to clean properly. They aren't the easiest to service or work on. Lots of tubing to remove and little parts and pieces. Cleaning and sanitizing has to be done in separate steps and 30-45 minute cycles for each.
I have a trane Intellipak I work on that is a two row micro channel coils deep on the condenser with about 2 inches between the coils. I'm still trying to figure out how to clean it well.
@@bflugan - Think of a lawn sprinkler. Long tube with nozzles in a row. You might have to make it yourself, but aluminum tubing isn't horribly expensive. Make an L shape (more than one?), put holes in one direction. Use that to slide between the coils.
Holy dust bunny's Bat man!
Lol you said " unit needs a little love "
Boy you gave it a whole lotta love. ( led zeppelin 's is better though..) it definitely needed.
Keep up the great work, nd as my uncle Marino would say " Jimmy if it were easy ,we'd have girls in mini skirts doing it."
May he R.I.P., dont think you could say that today anywhere,without offending someone.
Appreciate your time with the diagnosis, editing, nd up loading of the video.
Love how you had a lot more ...personality in this vid while still being informative , good job !
I make it to the end of all your vids. I like and enjoy them. Thank you for all the great work you do. I have learned so much. I do 3 or 5 residential ACs a year and your hvavr has given me some tips to help. Again thank you for being you ❤️
Martin 90s sitcom very funny back in the day thank you for sharing this video Chris keep safe dude 🙂
You do a great job at explaining things. We all make mistakes but that's what makes us human. You do excellent work on troubleshooting, finding the main source of the issue and fixing it. Great job man 👍
Manufacturers won‘t tell you how to fully clean their Units. Properly cleaning these condensers means the unit will function much longer than the warranty period lasts. This leads to decreased sales of either replacement parts or whole new units.
yup its all about money and profit, they want to sell more units so they withhold this kind of info
How much training from the manufacturer do you need to clean a condenser? What kind of training do your apprentices do before getting there ticket serriously its ridiculous to blame the manufacturers for something the industry teaches you on day 1.
Gonna say straight up, as a residential tech, no tune up includes splitting double layered condenser coils. In fact, the vast majority of those tune ups will not even include stripping the outside cages on condensers. Realistically we clean from the outside and blow in (and you are lucky to have foam cleaner used), not from a lack of knowledge but because customers don't want to pay what it costs as part of a tune up nor is it usually needed. If people complain about $75-$100 dollar tune-ups they certainly won't pay for $200-$300 dollar tune-ups.
That being said, when it is needed based on your tech's experience and/or there is an issue being caused....we do have charges for foam cleaning, for removing the outer jacket of condensers, for completely stripping a condenser and cleaning the outside and inside, and yes even for splitting double coils. So don't be surprised if your tech randomly comes up and brings up a higher dollar amount for a cleaning, and don't give him the "well no one else had to do that and it is working fine" line. It takes a lot of time to properly strip and clean condensers, especially depending on the manufacturer...so we gotta charge for that time.
You may not call your self an educator, but you are an excellent teacher !
You are correct. The condenser coil supposed to be split to clean it. The biggest problem I have with older AC units is leaks. I have the hardest time finding a leak on a good working unit.
I watch till the end enjoy your work methodology. I hope you find some good workers.
When you started bump starting the unit, my battery backups in my room clicked. It confused the heck out of me! I just happened to have a power glitch at the moment Chris pushed in the contactor. 🤣🤣🤣
I always make it to the end of the video. Great 👍 video as always, thanks for making HVAC/R better with all the knowledge and advices you provide to this amazing career.
yep, i watched it all. in the end you said 'be kind'. good advice.
btw, love your ramblings.
Perfect does not exist...... And by the way you are super helpful with your videos..... No one knows every thing.....
Made to the end thank you for making the videos. I had to replace a compressor on a 21 year old carrier because I could not get unit. I use to live in San Diego I understand how California is . Nice to live but expensive with a lot epa rules.
Made me laugh haha! “Super heats a bit high, I hope it drops down…”
Superheat: *19-0 in .5 seconds*
I didn’t realize you had swiped so made me laugh 🤣
Ha ha
Yup, made it to the end. You’re definitely right on all of it.
I'd like to extend a big thank you for how much your videos are helping me turn into the tech I want to be. I find nobody wants to take the time to show their apprentices anything on site anymore. Not that I'm asking for much hand holding... It'd just be nice to know that I'm on the right track. Anyways, thank you so much for putting up these videos. I hope to be as knowledgeable as you one day.
Hey Cris, made it to the end and wanted to say thank you for the videos, even though the teacher was upset I’m sure any one in the trade knows what you are saying and even if it is said wrong we are all thinking it and probably don’t catch it haha. Thanks again keep up the good work and BTW love the march
To many people go to school for the trades and get taught the correct terms for things butbhave no clue or means of how to repair or diagnose why something broke. Any tech can swap parts... To trully understand how to correct a problem and prevent future problems is what seperate the good tech from the part swappers.
That being said contuing to educate your self in your chosen trade will always be beneficial. Great videos
Big thumbs up on not using aftermarket junk condenser fan motors, we have been burned lots of times as a company trying to save the customer company, way better off just using factory parts in the long run
22:15 Isn't there some kind of valve you can turn to adjust superheat? (According to my Google search there is, but I don't know a lot about how this works.)
I’m pretty sure you are referring to the show called Martin. I enjoy your videos, you explain things plainly so anyone can understand
Some times we talk so fast we mix words but that does not mean we cant do the job properly lol Some people are just picky. Keep it up fella.
7:43 cause it's an ongoing issue from the looks of those fuses sitting in front of board, and someone just kept changing fuses, probably going to find an oversized fuse
Cleaning them looks like a real satisfying job.
Martin bro! I remember being sick home from school and would watch it! lol
I always watch to the end the closing words section is my favorite.
Yes indeed you helping a lot of people…
Thanks. The number one argument with management is how long it takes to properly vlean the equipment. Thsnkd for that statement.
Good Class Chris 1 ? Can I hear your thoughts on the transformer?
you are perfect man
thanks for your efforts to share your knowledge and experience
The big gash in the condenser coil is common on those. It’s from the zip ties holding the coil together rotting out and breaking. Or guys will split to clean them and then leave the zip ties off. Eventually that top pass on the coil will rub out against the top of the unit and blow the charge.
There's no perfect person in the world. We learn by our own mistakes or were supported to any ways. Great job. That's how I was taught my dad said your going to learn all your life just don't give up is all I use that theory . You can read any book on any thing out there on how to do something hands on your going to find out they dont give you every thing. lol.😊
Any chance the superheat came down after the condensation cleaned off the no rinse evap coil cleaner?
Hey Chris, I always watch to the end, because a lot of times you'll explain things in the video in a little more detail. I am an electrician that converted to an ac technician, and I do notice the mistakes in terminology, but it doesn't bother me. I guess you'd have to be somewhat petty to really be bothered by it, which says a lot about that teacher at the convention. Continuity is really just a lack of resistance anyway, so no big deal there. Great video!
Best phrase on this channel “sorry I went off on a tangent”.
I do watch your videos to the end. sometimes twice, when i do fall asleep (my time nightma..gement is bad, so I do have a little bite of time before sleep)
stay cool ;-)
18:20 what the heck happened to that panel it looked like it had a meeting with the Hulk and got smashed🤣🤣
Fuck the haters man. The information you share via this channel has likely helped thousands. I know it's certainly helped me. And of course nobody is perfect. Just know that you are appreciated bro.
Well worth watching to the end of the video. Loved your response internet complainers- "shut-up" 🤣🤣
I usually find a short over between the panels by the evap coil. I always pull those coils apart, usually no one else does and its always gummed up with cottonwood.
Thanks Chris for a wonderful video, seen em all but have learned a lot with this one.
Thanks Chris. Keep it up.