05-12-2016, 11:50 AM
My neighbor gets the award for most amazing home system breakdown. The story, as I best understand it, is:
Monday morning at 3:00 AM neighbor heads to the shower. His HVAC is just outside the master bath. The unit calls for cooling and tries to start. He describes hearing ' a really load bad noise' comming from the condenser. So he goes to the Tstat and shuts it down. He leaves it off and heads to work.
At 5:00 AM, the wife calls in a panic because water is gushing through the ceiling in the home. Our homes have a ball valve curb water shut off without stops. So she spins the valve but doesn't get it closed. Neighbor returns home to find the hot water tank leaking. Our tanks are in the attic. It is gushing water from where the copper charge line enters the tank.
He touches the tank and gets a mild shock. He kills the water and finds electrical arcing at the dielectric joint. The arcing has burned the gasket, causing the leak. It has also fubar'd the tank's connect. He kills the breakers to the AC condenser and arcing at the tank stops. Plumber installs a new tank a few hours later.
Insurance, restoration company, and HVAC guys are called out. The HVAC system is 4 years old and the original contractor shows up. At this point, I lose track of all the players, but I know the HVAC guy claims that the condenser's disconnect box is wired wrong, and he re-wires it. Later an electrician is called out, he claims that the re-wired box is wired wrong and he re-wires it (again).
Plumber suspects a short in a wall, or a worn spot on the wires where they leave the building and transition to flex. Here are the photos of the disconnect box:
The box as it was for 4 years, and leading up to Monday morning:
The box after the first re-wire:
The box after the second re-wire
I believe it is at least a 5 ton unit. The way he explained it, I took the box to be the 220V mounted on the outside wall at the condenser, but the photos are obviously in the attic by the evaporator. This wouldn't explain the loud sound from the compressor, would it?
Monday morning at 3:00 AM neighbor heads to the shower. His HVAC is just outside the master bath. The unit calls for cooling and tries to start. He describes hearing ' a really load bad noise' comming from the condenser. So he goes to the Tstat and shuts it down. He leaves it off and heads to work.
At 5:00 AM, the wife calls in a panic because water is gushing through the ceiling in the home. Our homes have a ball valve curb water shut off without stops. So she spins the valve but doesn't get it closed. Neighbor returns home to find the hot water tank leaking. Our tanks are in the attic. It is gushing water from where the copper charge line enters the tank.
He touches the tank and gets a mild shock. He kills the water and finds electrical arcing at the dielectric joint. The arcing has burned the gasket, causing the leak. It has also fubar'd the tank's connect. He kills the breakers to the AC condenser and arcing at the tank stops. Plumber installs a new tank a few hours later.
Insurance, restoration company, and HVAC guys are called out. The HVAC system is 4 years old and the original contractor shows up. At this point, I lose track of all the players, but I know the HVAC guy claims that the condenser's disconnect box is wired wrong, and he re-wires it. Later an electrician is called out, he claims that the re-wired box is wired wrong and he re-wires it (again).
Plumber suspects a short in a wall, or a worn spot on the wires where they leave the building and transition to flex. Here are the photos of the disconnect box:
The box as it was for 4 years, and leading up to Monday morning:
The box after the first re-wire:
The box after the second re-wire
I believe it is at least a 5 ton unit. The way he explained it, I took the box to be the 220V mounted on the outside wall at the condenser, but the photos are obviously in the attic by the evaporator. This wouldn't explain the loud sound from the compressor, would it?
Shame on the men who can court exemption from present trouble and expense at the price of their own posterity's liberty! - Samuel Adams