Cav 96 has steady stream of water
firemun:
I have not been on here in a long time but its good to see so many familiar folks still on here helping folks like me! I have a Cav 96 that has steady stream of water coming from it. One of the lines in seems to be frosted over and I am guessing that is where it is coming from. But first, a bit of history. Back in the day I was on here frequently and was really big in to old machines. Life changes precluded me from being as active as I wanted to be in my hobby and I decided to let someone restore my 96. Long story short...my 96 was part of an action by the State Atty General and getting it back was a long drawn out process. After 12 years, the 96 came home. It was restored, poorly I might add. The refrigeration unit died within a year. A neighbor who does HVAC work said he would fix the machine’s refrigeration for me. He replaced the original with a modern compressor and it cools nicely and runs quiet but has this steady stream of condensate. The condensate jar fills up every few days as expected when it is warm and humid. The old compressor system never had this issue. I don’t know enough about refrigeration to tell a friend who did this for me for the cost of parts he has something running incorrectly. However, surely a new system should not do this. I know new refrigerators often have drip pans but they must evaporate the collected water. Any suggestions on how to approach this with my friend who did the work for me and get the water flow stopped?
Thanks!!
Jeff
Jim:
Hey Jeff,
In order to help with condensation, you may consider utilizing a large flat tray that collects the water opposed to a jar. A jar does not provide adequate evaporation but a large flat tray will yield good results possibly evaporating the complete tray regularly...
johnieG:
Yep, more surface area with a pan or tray,
firemun:
I actually had placed a half sheet pan under it for a while but it would overflow. I will try to get a little deeper one! Thanks to all!
johnieG:
You should also check the machines bottle-door alignment & Gasket(s)
The bottle-door not sitting square & flush while closed is probably the No.1 cause of warm & humid air infiltration that will cause the machine to sweat bullets (so to speak).
The bottle door & the main door gaskets can obviously let in humid air through the gaps between teh doors & frame while the machine is running & again cause excessive condensation to flow.
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