Back on-line in record time
Service contractor
gets cooling back
for NJ office tower.
A catastrophic flooding of a
1,200-ton chiller posed a serious
problem for the 5,000-plus
inhabitants of a large office
tower in New Jersey. Last summer’s
heat wave made working
without air conditioning an
impossibility.
Acting quickly, building management
immediately called
their service contractor, Monsen
Engineering.
"The number-one priority was
to arrange for a rental chiller,"
said Jeff Somers, service operations
manager. "While that was
being handled, our engineers
and technicians assessed the
damage and started to develop a
plan.
"The rental chiller was onsite
and operating the next after-noon."
RUPTURED TUBES
The damage, it turned out,
was worse than anticipated.
After draining 2,000 gal of water
from the chiller, Monsen technicians
discovered that nearly 200
tubes had frozen and ruptured.
"Considering the amount of
moisture and amount of damage,
we were looking at months of
dehydration using vacuum
pumps and dry ice," said Somers.
"That would cost the client a for-tune
in manhours, not to men-tion
chiller rental."
Monsen decided to look for
alternatives.
After some discussion, the
contractor called one of its sub-contractors.
"Hudson Technologies
specializes in catastrophic
refrigerant-side services," said
Somers. "We had used them
before and thought they might
have a cost-effective solution."
The first thing Hudson did
was to send a service team to
recover the charge. All that
remained of 5,000 lb of R-134a
was 184 lb.
Then the company’s engineering
team worked with Monsen’s
team to develop a plan. A list of
action items was put together for
Monsen that would be completed
prior to Hudson performing
dehydration.
While Monsen plugged leaks
and prepared the chiller, Hudson
engineers had time to fine-tune
their dehydration strategy.
"Dehydration is never easy,"
said Joe DeMaio, the company’s
r e g i o n a l s a l e s m a n a g e r .
"Because of the capillary effect,
moisture becomes trapped in
pockets throughout a chiller. And each make and model of
chiller is a unique dehydration
challenge."
The reclaim company, however,
has a successful track record.
In its lab there is an open-drive,
single-stage centrifugal
system and a hermetic,
multistage centrifugal
chiller.
"We’ve flooded these
systems and experimented
with different techniques,"
said Joe Longo,
vice president of engineer-ing.
"We've put a lot of
research into chiller dehydration."
THREE-MONTH JOB
DONE IN TWO WEEKS
When Monsen had pre-pared
the chiller for dehydration,
Hudson
technicians Frank Hall
and Jim Ward arrived
with a fully equipped
refrigerant-side service
vehicle.
W i t h t h e m t h e y
brought the tools needed to
dehydrate this 1,200-ton chiller:
the ZugiBeast™ high-speed
refrigerant decontamination sys-tem,
a predetermined quantity
of service refrigerant, and online
monitoring instruments. The
time goal: two weeks.
Monsen technicians conduct-ed
simultaneous eddy current
tests as dehydration proceeded
on the chiller to ensure there
were no more tube leaks.
When the dehydration was
complete two weeks to the day
after Hudson arrived on site, the
company’s two techs recharged
the system, then used a portable
lab to analyze the refrigerant for
moisture content.
"It came up 25 ppm" said
Somers. "I would have been
happy to sign off if it came up 50 ppm, and the AR1 allows levels
up to 100 ppm."
Mission accomplished.
Becuase of Hudson's portable, highspeed dehydration
technology, a job that could have taken months was
completed in two weeks.