Ted
The pilot formerly known as Twin Engine Ted
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- Oct 9, 2007
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iFlyNothing
I decided to make a separate thread for this to hopefully get the attention of folks who know more about HVAC but may not read my RV thread.
The RV has three air conditioners - two roof mount units (which are also heat pumps) and then the driver's area air conditioner, which is engine driven (or at least was). Because the engine is in the back, the system is complicated and not a good design. One of my lines failed last year, so I removed the 80-some feet (total) of AC hoses and vowed to make a better design.
The convenient part about having an RV is that I have a generator, an inverter, and essentially a whole lot of electricity available. So I've ordered a NOS R22 115VAC compressor rated for 13k BTUs. My plan is to mount it up front (near the evaporator core) and then run some much shorter lines, a new receiver/dryer, some 115VAC wire from an outlet that's already up front in that area, and then have electric AC. We tend to run the generator while driving anyway as we use a lot of electricity going down the road (we usually need the roof top AC/heat pumps going for comfort plus we're often running the washing machine, microwave, etc.).
Although the compressor is rated for R22, it should work fine with R134a, just perhaps a bit less efficient and I'll need to put the correct oil in. I doubt this should work much differently from standard R12 to R134a conversions, which I've done many of over the years.
One idea that came to mind was adding a reversing valve so that I could use this as a heat pump as well as an air conditioner. This would be nice as the heating up front is not "great" by any stretch, largely because the 40' worth of heater hoses end up making the coolant lose a lot of heat on its way to the driver's area.
The biggest question I have with this (maybe someone who knows more than I do about HVAC can answer) is how would an automotive expansion valve handle a reverse flow for a heat pump setup? I'm not sure whether it would still work in the same sort of manner or if it would get weird. Any thoughts?
The RV has three air conditioners - two roof mount units (which are also heat pumps) and then the driver's area air conditioner, which is engine driven (or at least was). Because the engine is in the back, the system is complicated and not a good design. One of my lines failed last year, so I removed the 80-some feet (total) of AC hoses and vowed to make a better design.
The convenient part about having an RV is that I have a generator, an inverter, and essentially a whole lot of electricity available. So I've ordered a NOS R22 115VAC compressor rated for 13k BTUs. My plan is to mount it up front (near the evaporator core) and then run some much shorter lines, a new receiver/dryer, some 115VAC wire from an outlet that's already up front in that area, and then have electric AC. We tend to run the generator while driving anyway as we use a lot of electricity going down the road (we usually need the roof top AC/heat pumps going for comfort plus we're often running the washing machine, microwave, etc.).
Although the compressor is rated for R22, it should work fine with R134a, just perhaps a bit less efficient and I'll need to put the correct oil in. I doubt this should work much differently from standard R12 to R134a conversions, which I've done many of over the years.
One idea that came to mind was adding a reversing valve so that I could use this as a heat pump as well as an air conditioner. This would be nice as the heating up front is not "great" by any stretch, largely because the 40' worth of heater hoses end up making the coolant lose a lot of heat on its way to the driver's area.
The biggest question I have with this (maybe someone who knows more than I do about HVAC can answer) is how would an automotive expansion valve handle a reverse flow for a heat pump setup? I'm not sure whether it would still work in the same sort of manner or if it would get weird. Any thoughts?