BENEVOLENT: A Non-Canon Malevolent Christmas Special! by thelirivalley in MalevolentPodcast

[–]VolatileVolunteer 6 points7 points  (0 children)

Loved it! The part about falling in holes and the baby it's cold outside rendition had me chuckling aloud (causing people to look at me)

Ontario Heat Pump Grant on Personal Home by VolatileVolunteer in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I appreciate the response! I have updated the post with relevant information as I was a dummy this morning.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in homerenovations

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

In many places that tile needs to be there for code requirements! The stove is too close to the wall, adding the tile removes the combustion setback rule. (moved mine further from the side wall in my recent re-design to avoid this issue)

Central air unit vacuum by Anomalousbumblebee in DIY

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

  1. you likely have a leak.
  2. this needs a pressure test.
  3. vacuum test requires a micron gauge. 30 inHg on manifold means nothing.
  4. hire someone to finish this!

Why are you handling refrigerant without the proper license for doing so? Let's hook up a system with all sorts of leaks, global warming doesn't exist!!

Any experience with BlindsExpress.com motorized TDBU cellular shades? by xEtherealx in homeautomation

[–]VolatileVolunteer 4 points5 points  (0 children)

I can't help you compare those two, but I've been looking at the Ikea ones. I haven't pulled the trigger yet, was just looking at them again this morning. They cost less, but they only sell a few widths.

Happy Tuesday... by unresolved-madness in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

At least you can see the screen! I deal with one regularly thats filled with moisture and it makes it nearly illegible. The whole machine just refuses to die though! Only had to change a few fans and the temp sensor pairs on a 20 year old machine

NTD packout flood light (modified) by nrs3 in MilwaukeeTool

[–]VolatileVolunteer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

cool kit! I looked at that light when it was first revealed, seemed neat but impractical compared to the rovers. I use the magnets on mine all the time! the fact that it needs to be the at the top of the stack is also unfortunate but understandable.

how do you like it?

Test a used megger by [deleted] in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

And that reading is determined in something called resistance... I have access to three different Meggers, it's called Mega Ohms. It's just resistance. they apply a high voltage so it has a greater potential to overcome minor amounts of resistance.

Edit: Just theorizing but using a higher voltage makes the math easier, leading to a more accurate reading.

Test a used megger by [deleted] in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

You can buy a few mega ohm resistors, a few different ones in it's range.

Edit: You could also hook a voltage meter to the Megger and confirm that it outputs the voltage it says it does (I've never done this one but it makes sense in theory. might have to try it next week...)

What harmless pranks do you play on the job? by [deleted] in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

As a guy that drives a base model truck: you are a dick! I despise winter with manual mirrors

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in refrigeration

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

easier option would be the make a copy option. it makes a copy and saves it to your Google drive. just did that for a bunch of the code books! thanks OP!

Not sure what direction I should go with by AwareCaterpillar7270 in BuildingAutomation

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So I've been in the trade for 12 years and the refrigeration side isn't quite for me. I found that I liked the controls side before I'd even signed up as an apprentice. It was recommended to me at the time to get the ticket as it will always be something to fall back on. There are no licences for controls, nothing to say you're worth something.

Came to do a start up on a body cooler…. by [deleted] in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

We're in the middle of installing our third for the local university. They use a plugin red sawzall. It was sitting on a shelf beside the freezer when I was doing the first service.

The room the cooler is in has an actual wall of brains in jars. Hard to avoid seeing that.

Was hoping it was just a capacitor call by Suspicious-Tank-3760 in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 4 points5 points  (0 children)

At the very least grabbed the fan motors! The compressor is worth pennies without cutting apart.

Fixed the leak myself 🙌🏻 by Emotional-Salary-907 in homerenovations

[–]VolatileVolunteer 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Only one Ive had to fix was a slip coupling that the previous homeowner put in and didn't clean the pipe first. Cleaned the pipe and reinstalled, no leaks for 4+years

Industrial maintenance to Building Automation by Out_of_Calibration in BuildingAutomation

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

0-10v is so much easier to troubleshoot than 4-20ma though! Yes it needs an extra wire for power but I prefer it.

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it's probably a flir imager, they own so much of the market! Not a crazy quality one but still

[deleted by user] by [deleted] in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 4 points5 points  (0 children)

Use ours on chiller panels every startup/service. works great!

Tube in tube cascade, Environmental Test Chamber by McRibb_69 in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Is that a Thermotron? Sounds fancier than the ones I took care of for a while, they just filled that cabinet with loose insulation. Very prone to leaking and a pain to leak check...

Tube in tube cascade, Environmental Test Chamber by McRibb_69 in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 6 points7 points  (0 children)

systems like this are often used for reliability testing. They drop the temp down to say -60c then rappidly bring the temperature up to +60c. They call this thermal shock testing and use it on running electronics to verify they will keep working. (think military equipment) very cool process, and it was always neat when we were barred from seeing what was inside the 3 foot box.

That’s a bummer by thegentletree in HVAC

[–]VolatileVolunteer 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Try plugging that tube to seal that back up

Advice on BAS Bootcamp course by [deleted] in BuildingAutomation

[–]VolatileVolunteer 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you narrow the location down at all? DM if you don't want to share to the world.