Quote:
Originally Posted by Chance
I haven’t read through all the posts, but doubt this has been covered. First, since you are willing to learn and I have experience designing and installing large refrigeration systems, I’ll add that your order of equipment the refrigerant goes through isn’t correct. For the context of this thread, however, I don’t think that matters much. Just mentioning it in case you want to look it up or discuss it further.
Secondly, you should think of the evaporator as a heat exchanger that is designed to operate with as little refrigerant pressure drop as practical. This means that in an evaporator, refrigerant goes in mostly as liquid and “evaporates” from liquid to gas at essentially (plus or minus) one pressure and thus one temperature. As long as there is a mixture of refrigerant liquid and gas present, the temperature won’t be significantly different. It’s only after all liquid has evaporated that the remaining refrigerant gas will warm quickly and not cool as much.
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I no doubt didn't word my post right, nor did I get to exact detail...but agree with your post..thanks for posting..