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evaporator coil before the blower??

42K views 14 replies 9 participants last post by  TechmanTerry  
#1 ·
I have been doing hvac and energy efficiency combined for about 10 years. I have never seen an evap coil before the blower motor before. this is an a/c only system in the attic in a ranch house. One main return in the hall coming in drawing air over the evap coil then out the supply. I have done a little research on this topic and found it to be more efficient when it is a/c furnace( I have never heard of this before either). does anyone have any input on this pros and cons? FYI this is in Connecticut.
 
#3 ·
Before the blower as in the return side or supply side? With furnaces the evaporator coil on the supply side after the heat exchanger to prevent the heat exchanger from sweating and rusting out. On heat pumps and straight air conditioners with air handler the coil is generally in the return although it can be on the supply side of the blower as long as any electric heating elements are on the supply side of the coil.
 
#4 ·
this is on the return side so it is "drawing" air through the coil rather than "pushing" air through the coil. generally at least in CT air is pushed through the coil on straight a/c systems. I have heard if it was a a/c furnace that yes you would want this for the same reason you just stated with the heat exchanger. but this is just a/c which is why I was confused.
 
#6 ·
while at this job I did notice a ton of water issues which I was thinking this could be why. I was not there to pyshcally test any other aspects of the system. this system was 6months old and already had mold growing in the supply side. I told the customer to contact who ever installed the system.
 
#13 ·
I always see them on the return side unless it's a case coil on a furnace. That's why you need a condensate trap because the negative pressure from the fan pulls air in not allowing it to drain without one. And case coils don't need a trap cause the positive pressure doesn't prevent it from draining.
 
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