PoorRod
Mechanical
- Feb 7, 2002
- 13
I was looking at the original 40 tear old HVAC system in building yesterday. The tenant was inquiring about modernizing the system for better performance. What I found was two multizone AHUs which will probably require a bit of maintenance that was neglected over the years, maybe a new control system, and T&B. My main concern was that one AHU services an administrative area, while the other services an area critical to the tenant's operation. Cooling is provided by DX coils in each AHU, connected to 2 reciprocating compressors (the compressors are identical, each rated at 38 tons), cooled by a common water cooling tower. At the site visit I folowed the lines, and I was pretty certain that each DX coil was connected directly to its respective compressor. However, after I left the site and looked at the as-built drawings, I noticed that the mechanical plans showed the two compressors piped in parallel, connected to common suction and liquid lines that served the coils. The ladder diagram seems to indicate that both compressors would run at the same time, but that is not clear. Heat is provided by a hot water boiler supplying water to coils in each AHU with a common pump and circulation loop.
My biggest concern at the site visit was that each AHU cooling coil was independent of the other, such that if the critical AHU lost cooling capacity, there was no way to provide refrigerant from the circuit that served the administrative area. To me, that seems like the biggest liability with this system, and my first though is to replace the DX coils with a chilled water system that could serve both AHUs (and move from old reciprocating compressors to a scroll or rotary chiller). However, looking at the drawings, it seems that the existing system was designed for either compressor to supply refrigerant to either coil.
I am not too familiar with refrigerant systems, so my questions are: Can I provide the redundancy I want with simple piping changes to the refrigerant system? Are two compressors in one circuit common, and if so, what controls would I need to make sure I protect the compressors?
Thanks.
My biggest concern at the site visit was that each AHU cooling coil was independent of the other, such that if the critical AHU lost cooling capacity, there was no way to provide refrigerant from the circuit that served the administrative area. To me, that seems like the biggest liability with this system, and my first though is to replace the DX coils with a chilled water system that could serve both AHUs (and move from old reciprocating compressors to a scroll or rotary chiller). However, looking at the drawings, it seems that the existing system was designed for either compressor to supply refrigerant to either coil.
I am not too familiar with refrigerant systems, so my questions are: Can I provide the redundancy I want with simple piping changes to the refrigerant system? Are two compressors in one circuit common, and if so, what controls would I need to make sure I protect the compressors?
Thanks.