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How does our HVAC work?

Ever wonder how the Atwater provides heating and cooling for units at the same time?

Our units have what are called “water-sourced” heat pumps.  In a conventional home, you have part of your HVAC indoors, either as air conditioning or a heat pump.  Then there is part of your HVAC that’s outside – any heat that’s pulled out of or pumped into your unit is exchanged with the air outside.  Refrigerant is pumped through a hose connecting the two.

A window air conditioner bypasses that hose and puts both parts in a box.  Half of it is inside, and the half outside exchanges heat with the air.

In our units, we have water line that comes from the roof, with water at a temperature such that your heat pump can pull heat out of (heating during winter), or put heat into (summer A/C).

However, that water needs to be either heated or cooled, and all that equipment is on the roof.

HVAC Cooling – Cooling Tower

The cooling at the Atwater works by taking the water line that goes into your unit’s HVAC, and uses a heat exchanger to cool that by the water loop that goes to the cooling tower.  While water drips down from inside, air is sucked in through the grates and evaporation cools the water, which then cools your unit’s HVAC water via the heat exchanger.

Why not just use the water in the cooling tower in the loop that goes into your unit?  See some shots down below where the heat exchanger was rebuilt – stuff grows in the cooling tower water that has to be treated with chemicals, whereas the water on your side of the heat exchanger is nice and sterile, keeping any sludge out of your HVAC’s heat exchanger.

Under CMI’s care

A closer look at the crud

This is how it looks now under Spectrum – the old media was so clogged it couldn’t be cleaned, it had to be replaced

The falling water is cooled by the air sucked into the mesh

From CMI’s time – A leak in the cooling tower allowed algae to grow.  This also indicates the water wasn’t being treated properly

I called this “the river of slime”

Nice and clean now

The round bit at the top is the fan’s exhaust

Equipment Room

The equipment room on the roof is where the boilers for your hot water and HVAC heating are kept, and where the heat exchanger for your HVAC cooling connects to the cooling tower.  The water lines that go into your unit, and the cooling tower water loop both need to be treated with chemicals to prevent corrosion and growth of micro organisms.

During CMI’s time – water treatment chemicals.  Note there is no containment to prevent leaks, and there are stains on the floor which indicate leaks have happened.

New water treatment system

Controls for the water treatment system

HVAC Heating

So, if the cooling tower cools the water that goes to your unit, how does it heat it?  The answer is: we have 3 gas-fired boilers

In winter, the water line that goes to your unit is heated by these boilers

We can see the water leaving the rooftop before it goes to your unit is at about 70F – coming back, after units have pulled heat from the water to heat their units, the temperature is now 67F or so.

When the cooling tower is used to cool the water during a hot day, it looks like this:

The water going to the units is about 77 F, returning it’s about 84 F.  The electronics to the left are VFDs (Variable Frequency Drives), which control motor speeds.

On a really hot day, 83 F leaving the roof and 92 F coming back

Water from the cooling tower exchanges heat with the water that goes into your unit via a heat exchanger:

Here’s a shot of it all assembled

The old heat exchanger exceeded the normal resistance to pump water through, so it was rebuilt.  Here are some shots from the teardown of old unit:

The old heat exchanger during teardown

This much gunk actually crippled the performance of the heat exchanger

New plates during the heat exchanger rebuild. Note the difference from the previous photo!

These red rods are under tremendous tension, they clamp all those plates together under very high pressure, and water from the cooling tower and your units flow through, exchanging heat.  Note all the warning labels!

Note the size of the pipes pushing water through the end of the heat exchanger

The heat exchanger plates exposed at the bottom

The pumps that pump the water into your unit’s HVAC

Pumps and valves

Pumps and valves

More VFDs

 


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