Piping, Brazing & Service Procedures
Refrigeration piping design, brazing with nitrogen, evacuation, leak detection, and charging procedures.
- Size suction, liquid, and discharge lines for proper velocity and pressure drop
- Explain the purpose of P-traps and double risers for oil return
- Describe proper brazing technique with nitrogen purge
- Perform system evacuation, leak detection, and charging procedures
- Explain pump-down, service valve operation, and Schrader valves
Lección 1
Suction, Liquid & Discharge Line Sizing
Piping Design Principles
Refrigeration piping must be sized to maintain adequate refrigerant velocity for oil return while keeping pressure drop within acceptable limits. Too small a line increases pressure drop (reduces capacity). Too large a line reduces velocity (oil does not return to the compressor).
Suction Line
Priority: Low pressure drop (most critical)
Min velocity: 700 fpm in risers
Effect of oversizing: Oil logging
Effect of undersizing: Capacity loss
Liquid Line
Priority: Prevent flash gas
Velocity: Not critical for oil return
Effect of oversizing: Higher cost, more charge
Effect of undersizing: Flash gas formation
Discharge Line
Priority: Oil return + acceptable drop
Min velocity: 1000 fpm in risers
Effect of oversizing: Oil logging
Effect of undersizing: High pressure drop
Suction Line Considerations
The suction line is the most critical line to size correctly because pressure drop in the suction line directly reduces compressor capacity. Every 1 psi of suction line pressure drop at the compressor suction is pressure that the compressor must overcome, reducing its effective pumping capacity.
The suction line should be pitched downward toward the compressor at a minimum slope of 1/2 inch per 10 feet. This ensures that oil drains toward the compressor by gravity along with the refrigerant flow.
Suction Line Insulation
The suction line must be insulated to prevent sweating (condensation) and heat gain. Heat gained in the suction line increases superheat and reduces system capacity. Insulation also prevents energy waste and water damage from condensation.
The suction line is the most critical to size correctly - pressure drop directly reduces capacity. Minimum velocity in suction risers is 700 fpm for oil return. Always pitch suction lines downward toward the compressor and insulate them.