The coil that serves the inside of the house is called the indoor coil. The reason is that the indoor coil is a condenser in the heating mode and an evaporator in the cooling mode.. (pg. 1077)
Next to the indoor coil.
The coils can be cleaned using a coil brush and foaming coil cleaner. These items are available at www.appliancepartspros.com.
In an air conditioner, thermal energy is the heat energy that is absorbed from the indoor air by the refrigerant as it evaporates in the evaporator coil. This thermal energy is then released to the outside air as the refrigerant condenses in the condenser coil, cooling the indoor air in the process.
yes. Can also be referred to as indoor coil.
An evaporator coil is part of an air conditioning system that absorbs heat from indoor air, causing the refrigerant inside to evaporate. This process cools the air before it is circulated back into the room.
There are 2 coils. 1 inside the indoor air handler or furnace and 1 outside on your condenser in the yard.
It is going to be part of the "indoor" evaperator coil. If you know the Brand of the INDOOR COIL and can get the model number you should be able to find a picture of the components on the manufacturers web site or by searching for it on a search engine such as Google or Ask! .com Also you will have a drain line that connects to the outdoors unless it is a window unit.
Does it have the correct amount of refrigerant, are the compressor valves good, is the indoor coil plugged.
With this 1 of 2 thing could hapeen or both together..The dirty filter does not allow air flow...in the cool cycle the evap coil will freeze and the indoor fan that is blowing will not blow through the ice...thus super cooling the area around the evap coil..when in heat mode {if it is a heat pump the outdoor coil will freeze first...as it is the cooler coil in heat mode...in cool mode the indoor coil will freeze fisrt and if not caught early it will freeze the whole way to the cond unit..over heating the compresser and eventually knocking it out on a thermal overload....If the indoor coil is in the attic it could flood the drain pan and make a stain in the sheetrock...have a great day, Donald j nesmith
It could be right at the indoor coil, which is pretty easy, you can use CO2 or nitrogen to usually unblock it.
Either the indoor coil (I assume that is what's freezing up) is getting too little airflow (bad fan, dirty air filter, clogged coil, etc.) or the unit is low on freon.