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Old 04-12-2013, 06:43 AM
Blind River Joe Blind River Joe is offline
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Location: Richmond, BC
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Default Chiller

Hello:

Just a bit of back ground. I am a refrigeration (HVAC Tech) by trade so I will try to answer you questions as best as I can.

Temp swing: If the thermostat is set to turn the unit on at 78of then that is when you chiller should start. There is usually what is called a deadband built into the thermostat of the chiller usually around 2 to 3 degrees. I.E. if you set the chiller to turn on at 78 and you have a 2 degree deadband the chiller will turn off at 76. The deadband is necessary because you just can't get that tight a temperature control at .2 degrees. Another reason for the deadband is to prevent what we call short cycling. Once the chiller turns off the refrigerant cycle requires time to equalizes pressure. Not going to go into all that but turning a compressor on and off very quickly is a good way to end it's life.

Your clunking sound when you move the chiller is the motor inside the compressor. The compressor motor is mounted on springs and when you move the chiller the motor (Inside the black dome looking item) hits the side of the casing. Normal to sometime hear this when you move the unit but not okay if it is clunking when the chiller is not being moved and the unit is running. Be gentle when you move the chiller. You may also hear a clunking sound when the chiller shuts off. Once again normal.

Pulsing hum not the normal constant hum not sure what you mean by pulsing hum. What are you comparing the noise to?

In you last question 3 minute load time... If I understand correctly you are using some other type of temperature sensor to turn you chiller on and off?? Here is how I run my chiller. The chiller is on a heavy duty programmable timer. It turns on at 8 am and off at 4:30 pm Monday to Friday. Sat and Sun on at 9:00 am off at 12:30 pm on at 3:00 pm off at 430 pm. My chiller has it's own temperature sensor built in to it just like your and cycles on and off as required as long as the heavy duty timer is energized. Hope this helped you out.
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