I wonder why the further south you get the more you see this stupid kind of drain. Going all the way under the slab and the going up creating a giant trap. When I do a new build I always get the plumber to run me a p-trap with a trap primer in it for me to run my drains into. No annoying long line to get clogged, no pump to fail, it just goes right into the sewer.
Yeah, there are plenty of slabs that have the drain going in the sewer but they back up a lot (majority of the rentals i work on are like that) so I end up having to run a condensate pump with tubing outside. Idk why this is a common thing in the south, but I will admit it's made drain issues very odd
Yeah I see that but it also could have an airflow issue (the fan blades or potentially fan speed I believe the speed tap is set to MED). I didn't wanna just go removing some refrigerant and then have the system operating worse. That's why I kind of just left it how it is. And my final reading on subcool when I left was 14.9 I just didn't record it so I'm not sure if it was dropping as the system was running which wouldn't make sense or if the temp outside was falling but it didn't feel like it
@@AB_HVAC true about the fan speed I couldn’t tell from what i seen in the vid. But I think as longs as it isn’t stay above 15-16 degrees of subcooling then I agree leave it because most systems call for for 10-14 so to me 16 degrees isn’t all that bad . Especially if delta T is achieved and your saturation evap temps are good let it ride