May cause moisture conditioner coil freezing? I know there are internal problems, such as lack of sufficient coolant, a fan of bad, dirty filters, and al, which may cause, but they are not a problem (as in the work properly), high humidity can cause a Home coil air conditioner to freeze?
Could it be that a more powerful unit is needed?
Finally, if there are internal problems, could exacerbate the high humidity of the ice, and the internal problems are more easily affected by high humidity?
You're right it sounds like you have another question, may be low on refrigerant or a problem with airflow. The high moisture content itself does not cause the coil to freeze. That said, if the coil is already freezing and high humidity in the house it will certainly contribute to the problem.
I would say that this is not a problem with the power of unity. Is a common misconception. (The bigger, the better) In fact, if the device is more size that can actually cool the house fast and do not take the moisture from the living area.
The icing problem has probably to do with one of the issues you mentioned. It may also be a restriction in the refrigeration system, a clogged filter drier, pressure regulator or bad.
Yes high humidity can aggravate the ice because the ice is condensation of moisture on a cold surface and freezing. The more moisture the thickest ice.
If the device is working properly and there is air circulation, both in the condenser coils and evaporates there should be no ice regardless of humidity.
The only problem you would if the unit was not powerful enough would be improper cooling, not icing up.
No - a dirty filter causes the coil to freeze.
Rarely, if you continue to rotate the camera up and down there, you're short on coolant. Check again.
High humidity does not cause a coil to freeze. Low freon evaporator fan does not work, clogged filter causes the problem of changing the filter, check to see if the evaporator fan is in operation if it is in charge of freon checked.
NO
Yes, high humidity can freeze coils c /. There are units that come with an optional antifreeze, so if your not then try turning off the camera for a while and restart. There is no problem internanl I know who could get there, but it happened to me when the weather is hot and humid.
Extremely low temperature of the coil to freeze casus it in almost all moisture conditions.
Too low temperature refrigerant is almost always caused by system load is low or low air flow over the coils.
Low system load must be handled by a technician.
Low air flow is probably handled by a technician because I'm sure you've checked to see clearly that the filter is clean.
Other reasons for the low air may be the coils are dirty themselves and do not seem to add warmth to them as it is blown over them.
ALMOST always loads low or low air flow .... Bank on this.
and no moisture is not culperate AT ALL.
absolutely !!!!! In fact, I had this same problem with my AC in my room! you must ensure that the
filter is cleaned almost every other day seriously!
clean the outside when the controls are! and the last thing I do is turn it off for at least 4 hours or more if it has a chance to thaw. we used to have a unit outside, my husband used to take a pipe and melt the ice in this way, it worked very well. if this is the kind of unit your talking
the crisis will last at least 7 days, then just shut down the unit and hose it again, it works wonderfully. tyaonmy@yahoo.com
No, we DONT all
More icing occurs in damp conditions. The cause is not the amount of moisture on the origin of icing it instead.
Posted on July 7, 2010.