kcrane
Well-Known Member
My Cruisair air-con packed up last week while doing reverse cycle duty as a heater, giving a "Lo PS" error. Turned out to be a fairly common problem - a slow leak and it had run out of gas. Fixed today by Seacraft.
Turned my mind to how it works and why it doesn't work well once the water temperature drops.
To practise thinking rather than Googling I tried to work out how it operates.
Have I got it right that the air-con uses the cooling effect of compressed gas evaporating to chill fresh water which is then pumped to air handlers in the cabins, which blow air over the chilled water to transfer cold air to the cabin?
When the gas is re-compressed presumably it gives off the heat it absorbed, which is transferred into raw seawater, which is then pumped over the side. Thus a stream of water above ambient is being pumped into the sea when the air-con is in cool mode.
If that's right, then on 'reverse cycle' I'm assuming the heat from compressing the gas is transferred to the fresh water, which is pumped to the cabins and the air handlers now blow warmed air into the cabin.
When the gas is allowed to evaporate the cooling effect is transferred to seawater, which is pumped over the side, now below ambient temperature, exiting the boat colder than when it was sucked in.
I can see this working until the chilling of the seawater pushes it towards zero, when it would ice up and stop the process.
That's my amateur guess as to why, at a certain seawater temperature, you can't get anything from reverse cycle.
Stands by to be shot down...
Turned my mind to how it works and why it doesn't work well once the water temperature drops.
To practise thinking rather than Googling I tried to work out how it operates.
Have I got it right that the air-con uses the cooling effect of compressed gas evaporating to chill fresh water which is then pumped to air handlers in the cabins, which blow air over the chilled water to transfer cold air to the cabin?
When the gas is re-compressed presumably it gives off the heat it absorbed, which is transferred into raw seawater, which is then pumped over the side. Thus a stream of water above ambient is being pumped into the sea when the air-con is in cool mode.
If that's right, then on 'reverse cycle' I'm assuming the heat from compressing the gas is transferred to the fresh water, which is pumped to the cabins and the air handlers now blow warmed air into the cabin.
When the gas is allowed to evaporate the cooling effect is transferred to seawater, which is pumped over the side, now below ambient temperature, exiting the boat colder than when it was sucked in.
I can see this working until the chilling of the seawater pushes it towards zero, when it would ice up and stop the process.
That's my amateur guess as to why, at a certain seawater temperature, you can't get anything from reverse cycle.
Stands by to be shot down...