After going through the whole hairball of becoming EPA 608 certified and
finally being able to
top up my own system,
a couple of months after that it was time to go back into cooling season.
I still wasn't sure if the leak was still leaking or what I'd find when firing
the system up again, but a quick look at the pressure-equivalent figures
said it still had saturation pressure inside and of course I knew exactly
what to do if it wouldn't run right.
But now it was actually throwing an error, a new one I hadn't seen -- L1.
"Malfunction of outdoor unit PCB".
(service manual pic)
This was trying to tell me that some power module or a current sensor associated with it had gone tango uniform, something not associated with a leak at all. *Argh.* Now the fuck what?! And what would it be next? Were things getting so generally wretched with this system that it was time to consider just replacing the whole thing? I wasn't ready for that, and at a minimum wanted to make sure I wasn't looking at a compressor replacement or something like that. I did a bit of testing, trying to run the compressor in "inverter test" mode where it basically cycles the drive waveform very slowly, enough to see on an LED blinkie-box, and I could feel the compressor *wiggling* a little but not actually running. So one of the 3-phase legs wasn't getting any current. Scoping the inverter waveforms was rather inconclusive, just because the output is so noisy and it's hard to find a good ground reference. Simple ohm checks told me that nothing was obviously open or shorted. But still the system insisted that the "A1P" board, which is Daikin's common term for main boards in general, was simply bum. In this case, it's the "everything" board with all the power supply and filtering and control logic and inverter all together, and sits buried fairly far back in the unit with all kinds of harnesses and connectors going to it. I searched up a handful of technician experiences diagnosing these, notably this post and some Youtubes from guys replacing them in commercial units. Basically, everything pointed to "just replace the board". As usual, Daikin's own service people gave me all kinds of crap about being a "licensed contractor", and "what company are you with", and you *have* to basically lie to them to get any support bandwidth from them at all. They need to learn that some "homeowners" can be as, if not more, clueful than the people working on this stuff every day. Especially homeowners who get trade certifications just to make their own lives easier. And now I could confidently tell them that *I* was the tech working on this system including with the refrigerants when needed, which likely carries a little more weight. The people in the HVACR industry *have* to stop trying to be so damn secretive about the trade, it's not like some elite wizards' guild, and you can learn all this stuff off Youtube and elsewhere anyway. Daikin's website is also a horror show, and only by jumping through a lot of permission-granting hoops was I able to look up my unit and determine its warranty status. At nine years old it was definitely out of warranty, so no hope of free replacement parts. It turned out the same supply house where I took my 608 test could order me a new inverter board from Daikin, given the exact outdoor unit model number, and at a substantially lower price than list. The more reasonable support guy I finally talked to at Daikin also suggested checking the compressor windings anyway, to make sure that wasn't behind any possible overcurrent situation. So, back to Amazon to order more tools: this time it was a megger, and in that same order I also picked up the Schrader core tool eventually used near the end of the leak-chasing page. |
We can't see it here, but there's a largish finned heatsink sticking out the back side of the board assembly, that sits in the airflow from the main fan. No power devices are visible on the top side of the board, but it is pretty clear from the large lands and isolation gaps where they are soldered in from the flip side. |
Part of the problem is that there is no external compressor crankcase
heater, the system just uses the compressor motor windings themselves, driven
in a way that doesn't let it turn, to build up heat in the hermetic.
When the system is on but idle, I can just barely hear something inside keening
away at about 10 kilohertz inside, telling me that the inverter is modulating
current out to the compressor even when not actively running it.
And stupidly, it does this regardless of ambient temperature -- even in the
height of summer, it will continue trying to provide "crankcase heat", and
with no airflow coming across the heatsink from the main condenser fan in
that state, the board basically just sits in there and cooks itself all day.
No wonder those part connections are brown and the heat-sink paste is dried up. The system certainly *could* be a lot smarter about this. There's an ambient temp sensor on the back of the unit, which could easily determine when the outdoors is already warm. It could also have had a thermistor added specifically for the compressor housing, to tell it that temp, and knock off with the gratuitous self-heating when it's not needed. |
There are a couple of ways to fix this problem, unfortunately in different phases of the product lifecycle. Newer versions of this same Skyair condenser *do* appear to have external bellyband crankcase heaters, and presumably use those instead of doing the coil-driving trick. That way an idle inverter board could truly be idle. But adding an external heater wouldn't fix my existing problem, because as much as I've scanned manuals and asked Daikin support, there's no given way to disable the self-heat mode in this older inverter board. One possible hack would be to install a muffin fan inside the unit and arrange to power it, to blow air across the heatsink when the main fan isn't running, and thus try to keep the power semis cooler during idle time. If something like that happens down the road, details may show up here. |