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Jersey Mike HVAC
США
Добавлен 2 фев 2010
HVAC Training videos.
How To: Professional AC Drain Line Assembly (Residential)
How I run a condensate AC drain line as a professional from AC units located in attics.
Просмотров: 958
Видео
How To: Professional AC Maintenance (Residential)
Просмотров 22 тыс.День назад
Step by step tutorial of a professional AC maintenance process. 00:00 What It's About 00:14 Filter Check 00:46 Evap Coil Cleaning 03:45 Drain Line Cleaning 04:49 Blower Motor Inspection 06:26 Testing Blower Capacitor 08:33 Blower Amp Draw Test 11:00 Testing Safety Switches 12:43 Drain Pan Inspection 12:57 Duct Work Inspection 14:11 Evap Delta T 15:15 Thermostat Test 15:48 Pulling Condenser Disc...
2 Stage Heat Pump Wiring
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.21 день назад
Basic 2-stage heat pump wiring ruclips.net/video/AMUU3EQ3qLs/видео.html ruclips.net/video/F88Y9NkvtQw/видео.html
Intro to Troubleshooting Central Air Conditioning
Просмотров 3,6 тыс.Месяц назад
How to start troubleshooting air conditioning systems with example problems.
HVAC: How To Pump Down Refrigerant
Просмотров 703Месяц назад
How to pump down refrigerant into a condensing unit without recovering.
How To Test If You Have A Bad Home Thermostat
Просмотров 6 тыс.2 месяца назад
How to properly diagnose home thermostats with a multimeter and/or jumpers. ruclips.net/video/7e5uDEHaDnA/видео.html 00:00 Tool use and T-Stat Switching 01:37 Transformers and Two R Terminals 03:30 How Switching Works w/Continuity 05:35 Power To R Terminal & Mistakes 08:18 Voltage On Open/Closed Switches 10:27 Testing With Jumpers
Avoid HVAC Related WATER DAMAGE (wiring safety switches)
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.2 месяца назад
The best low voltage wiring methods for condensate pump safety switches and float switches on different HVAC systems with and without smart thermostats. 00:00 Introduction 00:27 Straight Cooling / Battery T-Stat 02:13 Straight Cool W/ Smart Stats 04:39 Heating/Cooling in same 24 hr period 05:26 Heat Pump Systems (Any T-Stat) 06:01 High Efficiency Furnace (No cooling/Battery Stat) 06:41 High Eff...
Steam Circuit, Sequence & Diagnostics (Spark Ignition boiler)
Просмотров 1,3 тыс.2 месяца назад
Schematics come to life through the circuit sequence of a residential steam boiler.
Steam Boiler Circuit Sequence Animated (Standing Pilot)
Просмотров 2,8 тыс.3 месяца назад
Schematics come to life through the circuit sequence of a steam boiler. Automatic Water Feeders & LWCOs: ruclips.net/video/bSeZqs8n_8M/видео.html
Crucial Knowledge To Heat Pump Troubleshooting
Просмотров 13 тыс.3 месяца назад
Schematics come to life through all modes & sequences of a heat pump, which is absolutely necessary to know in order to successfully troubleshoot and fix conventional heat pump systems. . 00:00 Thermostat, AH & CU External Wiring 02:13 CU/Defrost Control Board Cooling Mode 04:44 CU High Voltage Circuits 06:11 Low Voltage System Heating Mode 06:57 Defrost Cycles 12:45 Auxiliary & Emergency Heat
Crucial Knowledge to AC System Troubleshooting
Просмотров 11 тыс.3 месяца назад
Watch and learn how electricity flows through a wiring diagram on high and low voltage wires in central air conditioning, which is crucial to understanding how to fix problems. 00:00 Introduction 00:29 Outdoor High Voltage 01:27 Indoor High Voltage 02:06 Step Down Transformer 02:39 Low Voltage to Control Board/Thermostat 04:22 Fan On Mode / Circuit 05:40 Cooling Mode / Circuit
How To Replace A Boiler Thermocouple
Просмотров 1,8 тыс.4 месяца назад
Cleaning thermocouples is a temporary fix for pilot light issues. Here's an easy, permanent fix for usually only $8 dollars. 00:00 Introduction 00:27 Power/Gas Off 00:51 Removing Burner/Pilot Assembly 01:46 Removing Old Thermocouple 03:08 Installing New Thermocouple 04:21 Thermocouple Connection at Gas Valve 05:38 Relighting Pilot Light 06:34 OEM or No OEM?
Solve Dozens of Furnace Problems With This Process
Просмотров 10 тыс.4 месяца назад
Dive into the logic of an HVAC Service Tech to diagnose dozens of common furnace problems. 00:00 Introduction 00:16 Confirm Power, Fuel, Call for heat 00:28 Checking Thermostat 00:49 Confirming Power 02:03 Testing Door Switch 02:23 Confirming Fuel 02:51 Sequence 03:03 Checking 3 or 5 amp fuse 03:35 Securing Door Switch 03:46 Repowering Furnace / Time Delays 04:31 Inducer Motor / Limit Switch Pr...
HVAC Relays (For Beginners)
Просмотров 6 тыс.4 месяца назад
Learn how relays work. We'll look at different types, working examples, relay schematics and testing procedures. ruclips.net/video/Rnly4IB69MY/видео.html ruclips.net/video/MI_YGxJ1pjY/видео.html 00:00 Introduction 00:27 Relay in Action 01:15 Relay schematic explained 04:22 Fan Board Relay Explained 07:25 Relay Diagnosis
3 Critical Steps To Perfect Soldering
Просмотров 1,6 тыс.4 месяца назад
Soldering can be easy or hard, depending entirely on these 3 steps. 00:00 Introduction 00:17 Clean Soldering Surfaces 02:27 Soldering Paste / Flux 04:10 Flame Control When Soldering 05:35 Soldering Demonstration
Wiring Multiple Zone Valves (Honeywell)
Просмотров 3,7 тыс.5 месяцев назад
Wiring Multiple Zone Valves (Honeywell)
Defrost Control Boards (Heat Pump Wiring Basics)
Просмотров 13 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Defrost Control Boards (Heat Pump Wiring Basics)
Heat Pump Wiring Basics (Universal Principles)
Просмотров 23 тыс.7 месяцев назад
Heat Pump Wiring Basics (Universal Principles)
Heat Pump Thermostat O, B, and C Terminal Variations Explained
Просмотров 13 тыс.8 месяцев назад
Heat Pump Thermostat O, B, and C Terminal Variations Explained
Electric Heat Strips (Wiring For Beginners)
Просмотров 34 тыс.8 месяцев назад
Electric Heat Strips (Wiring For Beginners)
Air Handler Wiring for Beginners (Fan Relays & PSC motors)
Просмотров 75 тыс.10 месяцев назад
Air Handler Wiring for Beginners (Fan Relays & PSC motors)
Adding R410A Refrigerant To AC (subcool method w/TXV)
Просмотров 6 тыс.11 месяцев назад
Adding R410A Refrigerant To AC (subcool method w/TXV)
Thermostat Wiring at Control Boards
Просмотров 41 тыс.11 месяцев назад
Thermostat Wiring at Control Boards
HVAC Diagnostics: Furnace Wiring (Breaker to Flame)
Просмотров 2,4 тыс.Год назад
HVAC Diagnostics: Furnace Wiring (Breaker to Flame)
Beginner HVAC: Misconceptions About Color Codes
Просмотров 3,1 тыс.Год назад
Beginner HVAC: Misconceptions About Color Codes
How RIB Relays Work & What They Can Do
Просмотров 32 тыс.Год назад
How RIB Relays Work & What They Can Do
Zoning Boilers with Nest Thermostats: Low Power & WIFI Problems
Просмотров 11 тыс.Год назад
Zoning Boilers with Nest Thermostats: Low Power & WIFI Problems
nice job i will study this
Went to help someone and got the outside unit from the contact switch to work condensor, then cked the thermostat, know from you that should be first now i know. no power at red to y in attic opened the cover and did not know how to trouble shoot but did ck the drain switch....no water so know it must have been the thermostat or the fuse? but had to turn over to a pro.....now with your help, I'm getting a getter idea.....your thoughts?
I teach HVAC in a high school in the Boston area. Stumbled upon your videos and the students really enjoy them. Some of the videos we find are too vulgar or too boring. We have not seen you on the videos so everyone tries to describe what you look like. The common theme is that no matter what you look like they all say you are an HVAC BOSS!!! and this is from your Boston area rivals!
When I was talking about vulgar or boring I was talking about other videos I find on the internet, not yours.
Does this mean that if I have a dedicated wire for RC and dedicated wire for RH that I would always remove the jumper?
Smart thermostats can be different, but with any typical battery operated thermostat, yes, remove the jumper in that case.
@@JerseyMikeHVAC thank you!
Excellent video saved my ex gf $900 service call by reinforcing a reassuring my logic. Thanks!
👍👍👍
Good setup unless the float switch fails. Think I'll stick with the float switch on the main drain, and the pan drain open with its own pipe to the outside. Belt and suspenders.
Maybe, but both float switches would have to fail to reach that point.
@@JerseyMikeHVAC Right, thanks. I missed the second switch.
Thanks for sharing....Nice!
Im going to show all my crew members this. This is how it is done! 👍🏽
That's brilliant about having the secondary drain on the pan with the ball valve and float switch. Definitely saves techs a lot of time and seems like a safe, smart thing to do.
I like how a piece that costs maybe 2 bucks can bring the benefits I outlined in the video.
That is a great example of how a drain install should be done. Too bad most HVAC contractors do not want to take the time to do it right.
man, if only this was done as standard.
Very professional setup.
Thank you, brother.
your videos are on another level. Thank You!
Very Welcome.
You have no idea how much your videos help me, thank you brother for taking the time to teach
No problem. Glad you're getting a lot out of it!
Man as someone who is getting into HVAC but haven't started school and just kinda wanna learn thing beforehand alot of this is just word jargon to me. Staring at the screen like what am i hearing lol but im looking forward to learning and appreciate the work. Its insane you went through all that by memory
It's going to feel like you're drinking from a fire hose for a while. Just focus on understanding how things actually work, not memorizing things, and you'll be just fine.
@JerseyMikeHVAC thank you, I appreciate it
Thank you so much for this detailed info i understand my system so much better
I learned an amazing amount of information with respect to the heat pump operation and circuitry in just 15 minutes. Your explanations are perfect. Thanks so much. A little bit of information can sometimes be dangerous. I have a greater amount of confidence now when I am troubleshooting my home system. Many thanks Mike for a wealth of valuable information.
Really good tips but I would suggest that when you remove the disconnect, place it on top of the disconnect box or somewhere you can easily see it. That's a positive guarantee that 240 has been disconnected. Putting it back into the box upside down does disconnect the 240, but maybe you forgot to actually take it out, or you put it back in right-side up, or you just took it in and out several times when checking the system and you can't remember is it in on or in off. Leaving it outside the box in plain sight leaves no room for speculation.
I hear ya. I do exactly that when I'm servicing or anything else, but with maintenance I started keeping them in flipped and just testing for power at the contactor before moving on to anything electrical, 1) because I don't want the handle to get wet from hosing off the coil and be wet when I put it back in, and 2) I don't want to risk losing it somehow or stepping on it or whatever by putting it far enough away from the work area to keep it dry.
Jersey Mike, when you're done fixin the ac, fix me up a nice #13 Italian would ya? Heavy on the prosciuttini and cappacuolo, capiche? Sorry...couldn't help myself..:)
Aaayyy. Oh. Fughettaboutit.
Excellent explanation. Great job. Thank you
Keep up the great work , very helpful videos
How do you a split up flow???
Cleaning an A coil
A lot of disassembly, particularly on furnaces. But sometimes you get lucky by just removing a few screws to remove the front panel.
u do a good job show us stuff
Ive really been enjoying your heat pump videos, as an apprentice this has been very helpful. Thank you!
You're welcome
Sad part is i never worked for a company that allowed the time to do a thorough maintenance. Which leads me to my question what would be a reasonable price to pay for something like this?
I do a 90 minute maintenance for $169.
Excellent and thorough! I have an 'N' evap coil at bottom of downflow stack with "dirty" side *directly* under heat exchanger (only ~1" gap), and "clean" side duct exiting down into difficult access in crawlspace. Aside from disconnecting line set and pulling the darn thing out, how do you cope with that as part of cleaning maintenance? Thanks!
I'll take a temperature differential reading before and after the coil, usually putting the "before coil" probe using the high limit switch hole inside of the furnace. Then I'll take an external static pressure reading (return and supply plenums). Both a high ext. static pressure and a temperature differential outside of 18-22 deg is a good indicator the coil may be dirty and restricting airflow. Frosting refrigerant lines and long cycles are other indicators.
best !!!
One awesome explanation on "HVAC theory and operation" for us "newbies or DIYers" like nothing I've ever seen before on RUclips......many thanks to "Jersey Mike's channel" here in providing real world experience and knowledge to this trade here.....much appreciated!!!!!!
Thank you, brother.
@@JerseyMikeHVAC Your very welcome!
My guy Mike !! Excellent video, very thourough and detailed. Your content is extremely good, keep doing your thing. Hands down one of the best hvac channels on here by far 👍🏼👍🏼👍🏼✌🏼✌🏼
Thank you, brother. Much respect.
Great videos brother!!
Very good video!!! You go further than me lol. One question why don’t you check capacitor under load?
With the math involved in doing it like that, I feel like it's just faster to pull the wires off.
Jersey Mike, thanks for the great turorial. Is there a way to determine whether my system is overcharged with refrigerant, without using a gauge set? Are there some signs to look for? Thank you.
www.townsendtotalenergy.com/overcharged-ac-symptoms
Great job . Very helpful
You know I’m in the oil business over 37 years. And this by far is THE BEST refresher for someone that rarely works on gas. Thank you Mike.
Much respect to you. Thank you.
@@JerseyMikeHVAC And to you Sir. Very much appreciated.
AM I BEING DIFFICULT ASK MY MAINTENANCE GUY FOR A CONCISE REPORT OF HIS FINDINGS / MEASUREMENTS? This is a beautiful, informed, and clear video. Thank you for sharing. I've long, clear understanding of all the procedures you described, except for using the gages. We have been highly satisfied with our installation and annual maintenance, but it's been more than 20 years. Understanding the usable life could be running out, we want to know the paid maintenance is optimal.
We put all of our readings right on the maintenance invoice. It's not too much to ask. Old system an R-22 system? I would say at this point it's time to mull over whether a significant repair would be worth it at all at this point vs. a new unit. Leakey evap coils are so commonly the reason a lot of these older systems end up getting replaced, and if it's R-22, you're probably going to have to consider both a coil and condenser upgrade to 410A at the least. If you're likely to opt for getting a newer unit when the next repair comes, I would say just clean the coils off with water, keep the filters really clean and flush out the drain lines once in a while and just leave it at that until the time to replace comes.
Mike, great video. Do you have or know of a simple one page checklist that has all these checks and their typical readings?
Not that I know of. Different parts from different manufacturers can have different typical readings so its hard to come up with a 1 size fits all list.
Thanks for the info I was lost on the field 🙏
dont set multimeter to micro camps thats for small currents under an amp. if your looking for amps 1 or more set it to the proper setting range or risk frying. some meters have a plug saying 10 amps thats where you stick your negative lead into
Like the world needs another RUclips Technician. Rather than make these stupid videos start a non profit that gets poor people heating and cooling. Make our industry better not worse.
Most of the viewers on my channel are other techs who are learning. My videos are aimed at helping them be better technicians. I also help a lot of people for free. I'm not selling anything here. I don't ask people for money. I don't understand how that's making it worse.
@@JerseyMikeHVAC You are dime a dozen bro. Do something in the industry. All you are doing is making videos for hacks.
@WhowereEpsteinsclients I'm curious why you didn't bother to reach out and ask if I would be interested in partaking in some non profit or charity you already have up and running. I likely would have been on board with that. This more or less bitter approach isn't working to make anything better in the world.
You sound like a mikey pipes fan 😂😂
@@oilandfireguy1739 Cant stand that yankee loud mouth.
Excellent video. Thanks for such a detailed process. Wish more people were so thorough. Also thanks for correction on amps vs ohms. Was driving me crazy, lol. Thanks!
Excellent video. Thanks for such a detailed process. Wish more people were so thorough. Also thanks for correction on amps vs ohms. Was driving me crazy, lol. Thanks!
Hey bro, great video. If you are going to use other channels footage, please check with them first. Good way to get a copyright strike. Thanks man
Sure. Sorry about that. I can cut that part out if you'd like me to. Or I can link to your video. Just let me know.
Shiny fins👍🏽 Hands down the best videos for HVAC you will find. Keep them coming maestro!
Just drain the capacitor with a multimeter (measuring AC voltage) - quick, easy, and safe… Just my two cents, but I am also one of the few that wears CAT 2 rated PPE and EH rated boots stepping out of the house for any work no matter how trivial; and probably the only one with a CAT 4 Arc Flash suit in their truck as well…
I have an arc flash suit as well, just not on the truck.
I tried to test this. I charged a capacitor with a 12v battery, then set the meter to Volts DC and watched it drain. It was reeeeeally slow. Is this what I can expect in the field? Would it have made a difference if I set it to AC volts instead?
Thank you for sharing your knowledge.