Installation Of Vapor Line; Underground Installation; Heat Protection; Precautions During Brazing Of Lines - York International TCHDSERIES Installation Manual

R-410a horizontal discharge 1.5 to 5 tons – 1 & 3 phase
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5320779-UIM-A-0417
WARNING
!
Never install a suction-line filter drier in the liquid line of an R-410A
system. Failure to follow this warning can cause a fire, injury or death.

PRECAUTIONS DURING LINE INSTALLATION

1.
Install the lines with as few bends as possible. Care must be taken
not to damage the couplings or kink the tubing. Use clean hard
drawn copper tubing where no appreciable amount of bending
around obstruction is necessary. If soft copper must be used, care
must be taken to avoid sharp bends which may cause a restriction.
2.
The lines should be installed so that they will not obstruct service
access to the coil, air handling system, or filter.
3.
Care must also be taken to isolate the refrigerant lines to minimize
noise transmission from the equipment to the structure.
4.
The vapor line must be insulated with a minimum of 1/2" foam rub-
ber insulation (Armaflex or equivalent). Liquid lines that will be
exposed to direct sunlight, high temperatures, or excessive humid-
ity must also be insulated.
5.
Tape and suspend the refrigerant lines as shown. DO NOT allow
tube metal-to-metal contact. See Figure 2.
6.
Use PVC piping as a conduit for all underground installations as
shown in Figure 3. Buried lines should be kept as short as possible
to minimize the build up of liquid refrigerant in the vapor line during
long periods of shutdown
7.
Pack fiberglass insulation and a sealing material such as perma-
gum around refrigerant lines where they penetrate a wall to reduce
vibration and to retain some flexibility.
8.
For systems with total line length exceeding 70 feet, see APPLI-
CATION DATA and worksheet "General Piping Recommendations
and Refrigerant Line Length" for vapor and liquid line sizing, cali-
bration of liquid line pressure loss or gain, determination of vapor
line velocity, elevation limitations, orifice connections, system
charging or traps.
FIGURE 2: Installation of Vapor Line
FIGURE 3: Underground Installation
4

PRECAUTIONS DURING BRAZING OF LINES

All outdoor unit and evaporator coil connections are copper-to-copper
and should be brazed with a phosphorous-copper alloy material such
as Silfos-5 or equivalent. DO NOT use soft solder. The outdoor units
have reusable service valves on both the liquid and vapor connections.
The total system refrigerant charge is retained within the outdoor unit
during shipping and installation. The reusable service valves are pro-
vided to evacuate and charge per this instruction.
Serious service problems can be avoided by taking adequate precau-
tions to assure an internally clean and dry system.
CAUTION
!
Dry nitrogen should always be supplied through the tubing while it is
being brazed, because the temperature required is high enough to
cause oxidation of the copper unless an inert atmosphere is provided.
The flow of dry nitrogen should continue until the joint has cooled.
Always use a pressure regulator and safety valve to insure that only
low pressure dry nitrogen is introduced into the tubing. Only a small
flow is necessary to displace air and prevent oxidation.

PRECAUTIONS DURING BRAZING SERVICE VALVE

Precautions should be taken to prevent heat damage to service valve
by wrapping a wet rag around it as shown in Figure 4. Also, protect all
painted surfaces, insulation, and plastic base during brazing. After braz-
ing, cool joint with wet rag.
WARNING
!
This is not a back seating valve. The service access port has a valve
core. Opening or closing valve does not close service access port.
If the valve stem is backed out past the chamfered retaining wall, the
O-ring can be damaged causing leakage or system pressure could
force the valve stem out of the valve body possibly causing personal
injury.
Valve can be opened by removing the plunger cap and fully inserting a
hex wrench into the stem and backing out counter-clockwise until valve
stem just touches the chamfered retaining wall.
Connect the refrigerant lines using the following procedure:
1.
Remove the cap and Schrader core from both the liquid and vapor
service valve service ports at the outdoor unit. Connect low pres-
sure nitrogen to the liquid line service port.
2.
Braze the liquid line to the liquid valve at the outdoor unit. Be sure
to wrap the valve body with a wet rag. Allow the nitrogen to con-
tinue flowing.
3.
Carefully remove the plugs from the evaporator liquid and vapor
connections at the indoor coil.
FIGURE 4: Heat Protection
Johnson Controls Unitary Products

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