1. Home
  2. Docs
  3. Evaporator Coil
  4. TXV and Pressure Valves

TXV and Pressure Valves

TXV (Thermostatic Expansion Valve) & Pressure Valves


1. TXV (Thermostatic Expansion Valve)

Function:

  • Precise Metering: Controls refrigerant flow into the evaporator coil based on cooling demand.
  • Superheat Management: Maintains optimal superheat (8∘C–12∘C) for efficiency.
  • Load Adaptation: Adjusts flow during startup/load changes to prevent floodback or starvation.

Key Components:

  • Sensing Bulb: Attached to suction line; detects refrigerant temperature.
  • Diaphragm: Converts temperature/pressure into mechanical force.
  • Needle Valve: Modulates refrigerant flow.
  • Equalizer Line: Balances pressure (internal/external).

Operation:

  1. Sensing Bulb heats up → pressurizes diaphragm.
  2. Diaphragm expands → opens needle valve → increases refrigerant flow.
  3. Suction line cools → diaphragm contracts → reduces flow.

Types:

Type Application Key Feature
Standard TXV Residential AC Fixed superheat setting
MOP (Maximum Operating Pressure) Low-ambient cooling Limits evaporator pressure
BLEED TXV Heat pumps Allows pressure equalization at shutdown
Electronic (EXV) Inverter systems Motor-driven precision; integrates with ECM

2. Pressure Valves

A. Pressure-Regulating Valves

Valve Type Function Location
CPR (Crankcase Pressure Regulator) Prevents compressor overload during startup/low temps Compressor suction line
OPR (Evaporator Pressure Regulator) Maintains minimum evaporator pressure Evaporator outlet
Head Pressure Control Keeps condenser pressure stable in cold weather Condenser outlet

B. Safety Valves

Valve Type Function Activation
Relief Valve Releases refrigerant at unsafe pressures Set point (e.g., 650 PSI for R-410A)
Fusible Plug Melts to vent refrigerant during fire/overheat Temperature-based (e.g., 165∘C)

Troubleshooting Guide

TXV Failure Symptoms & Fixes

Symptom Cause Diagnostic Test Solution
High Superheat TXV underfeeding Check bulb attachment; measure superheat >15∘C Replace TXV
Low Superheat TXV overfeeding Flooded evaporator; superheat <5∘C Adjust charge/replace TXV
Hunting (Cycling) Contaminants, bulb issue Observe pressure oscillations Clean/replace TXV
No Cooling TXV stuck closed Frost on evaporator; no refrigerant flow Replace TXV

Testing TXV:

  1. Measure superheat:Superheat=Suction Line Temp−Saturation Temp at Suction Pressure
  2. Bulb Test: Apply heat/cold to bulb; listen for valve movement.

Pressure Valve Failure Symptoms & Fixes

Symptom Valve Type Solution
Compressor short-cycling CPR stuck closed Clean/replace CPR
Low evaporator pressure OPR stuck open Replace OPR
Refrigerant leakage Relief valve weeping Replace relief valve
High head pressure Head pressure valve failure Clean/replace valve

Replacement & Maintenance

TXV Replacement:

  1. Recover refrigerant.
  2. Replace TXV (match specifications: refrigerant, tonnage).
  3. Braze with nitrogen purge.
  4. Evacuate/recharge.
    Cost200–500 (part + labor).

Pressure Valve Replacement:

  • CPR/OPR: 100–300.
  • Relief valve: 50–150.

Preventative Maintenance:

  • Annual Inspections: Check for oil residue, corrosion.
  • TXV Bulb Care: Ensure tight contact, insulation, and correct positioning (top of suction line).

Critical Specifications

Component Key Specs Compatibility
TXV Tonnage, refrigerant type, superheat setting R-410A TXV ≠ R-32 systems
CPR Pressure setting (e.g., 60 PSI) Matches compressor LRA
Relief Valve Burst pressure (e.g., 650 PSI) Must exceed system max PSI

Summary

  • TXV: Brain of refrigerant metering; fails due to contaminants, bulb issues.
  • Pressure Valves:
    • Regulators protect components from pressure extremes.
    • Safety valves prevent catastrophic failures.
  • Pro Tip: After TXV replacement, always measure superheat/subcooling!

⚠️ Warning: Incorrect TXV sizing causes efficiency drops + compressor damage.

Articles

How can we help?