Welcome to our Sporlan Series Webinars Q&A blog to help support your supermarket systems. This blog answers more of the questions asked during the Compressor Failures webinar.
Welcome to our Sporlan Series Webinars Q&A blog to help support your supermarket systems. This blog is the second of a three-part series that answers more of the questions asked during the Compressor Failures webinar.
Welcome to our Sporlan Series Webinars Q&A blog to help support your supermarket systems. This blog is the second of a three-part series that answers more of the questions asked during the Compressor Failures webinar.
Welcome to our Parker Sporlan Series Webinars Q&A blog to help support your supermarket systems with oil system management. This blog will cover the questions asked during the Oil Level Control Systems webinar.
Welcome to our Parker Sporlan Series Webinars Q&A blog to help support your supermarket systems with oil system management. This blog will cover more of the questions asked during the Oil Level Control Systems webinar.
Welcome to our Parker Sporlan Series Webinars Q&A blog to help support your supermarket systems with defrost methods. This blog covers more of the questions asked during the Parker Sporlan Supermarket Seminar webinar on defrost methods.
Welcome to our Parker Sporlan Series Webinars Q&A blog to help support your supermarket systems with defrost methods. This blog covers more of the questions asked during the Parker Sporlan Supermarket Seminar webinar on defrost methods.
This Climate Control blog is to review the basic refrigeration cycle and the interaction between the four basic components. The four basic components are the compressor, condenser, expansion device, and evaporator. Let's look at each component and its function and then look at what happens when we do not properly match these components.
Annual Walk-in Energy Factor (AWEF) is an energy standard by the Department of Energy (DOE) that measures electrical energy input versus its cooling capacity. All commercial refrigeration equipment manufacturers should comply with the AWEF rating specified by the DOE. HVAC equipment of 3000 ft² or less must conform to this new requirement. All new walk-in installations should be with an AWEF-compliant unit. Furthermore, anytime a replacement unit is installed, it needs to comply with AWEF.
Attempts to regulate the air conditioning (AC) and commercial refrigeration markets for the benefit of the environment are nothing new. During the past 25+ years, various legislative actions have limited the use of various refrigerants that depleted ozone or emitted greenhouse gases, both of which have been shown to contribute to global warming potential (GWP).
Manufacturers of refrigerants, controls, and other suppliers distribute hundreds of thousands of pressure-temperature charts to the trade every year. It would be rare indeed to find a service technician who could not put their hands on a pressure-temperature chart or application at a minute’s notice.
Have you considered a CDS valve conversion for improving performance and reducing costs on your refrigeration equipment? Over the past ten years, Parker Sporlan has completed tens of thousands of these conversions. Sporlan is well-known for its innovative and economical solution for converting SORIT evaporator pressure regulators on refrigeration equipment into stepper motor-driven CDS valves.
Lubricant-refrigerant mixture breakdown causes sludge formation and other corrosive materials that will hinder the normal operation of compressor valves and control devices in refrigerant and HVAC systems. Scale, solder particles, dirt, and all types of foreign substances must be removed to protect the compressor, solenoid valves, expansion valves, capillary tubes, and other close tolerance parts.
Parker Sporlan’s ZoomLock MAX refrigerant press fittings, designed for the air conditioning and refrigeration markets, allows HVACR contractors to make secure leak-free connections in seconds. That equates to less time on the job and more profit for your business.
ZoomLock MAX provides a clean, leakproof connection for refrigerant lines up to 700 psi. By eliminating concerns about gas and flames, ZoomLock MAX gives you more flexibility in where and when you can work, plus there is no need to nitrogen-purge the lines. This post is the first of three blogs answering your top FAQs on the product.
ZoomLock MAX refrigerant press fittings are changing the way HVACR professionals connect refrigerant lines. By using ZoomLock MAX, you, the HVACR technician can connect refrigerant lines in seconds, boosting efficiency while providing the safety and reliability you expect from Parker.
This post is the second in our series providing answers to the top FAQs on ZoomLock MAX fittings. The answers cover crimping, jaws, tools, and compliance.
ZoomLock MAX refrigerant press fittings help to improve productivity for HVACR contractors and technicians on the job. The ZoomLock MAX complete system with all the sizes and configurations you need saves time and improves safety and efficiency.
This post is the last blog in our series, providing answers to the top FAQs on ZoomLock MAX. The Q & As cover refrigerants and oils and installation technicalities for fittings, leaks, sealing temperature, and system compatibility.
Sporlan Division
206 Lange Drive
Washington, MO 63090 USA
Ph: +1 (636) 239-1111
Fax: +1 (636) 239-9130
SVDTECHSUPPORT@PARKER.COM