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What purpose does this part serve?

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Hi, I’m trying to figure out if this is a secondary drain pan and what purpose it serves? I reached out to my local HVAC contractor about it but have not heard back.

I am no expert, so please forgive me if this seems ignorant. Wondering if it should have been removed at the time of install?

Visible signs of mildew and moisture behind it and it appears it cannot be removed without having the lines disconnected first. I just reinstalled the blower motor and fan after doing a deep clean so I’d like to make sure this pan isn’t contributing to moisture buildup.

Thank you in advance for your time and expertise!

396082A5-A2B3-4680-A480-C6E6CD62D704.jpeg 8F7F2CCF-3043-4828-8F79-E3C294DCFB2B.jpeg E392371D-FDD0-4263-AAAA-BA5800FB4B95.jpeg A11313C5-8B65-4D53-9FED-DA3B4A6BDE1B.jpeg

Comments

  • Ironman
    Ironman Member Posts: 7,876

    It’s a horizontal drain pan for when the AHU is installed in that position.

    Since the unit can run with it when it’s in that position, it does no harm to leave it in when the unit is vertical. In fact, it can actually help hold the insulation from coming loose.

    Bob Boan
    You can choose to do what you want, but you cannot choose the consequences.
    PC7060mattmia2
  • hot_rod
    hot_rod Member Posts: 26,687

    Is it the drain pan for when the unit is mounted horizontally?

    Bob "hot rod" Rohr
    trainer for Caleffi NA
    Living the hydronic dream
    mattmia2
  • EBEBRATT-Ed
    EBEBRATT-Ed Member Posts: 19,676

    Mult position Air Handler

    mattmia2bb12385
  • pecmsg
    pecmsg Member Posts: 6,799
    edited December 2025

    That entire unit is one big mold factory.

    Download the manual and see if it must be removed or it can stay.

    bb12385
  • ratio
    ratio Member Posts: 4,178

    I've yet to see instructions to remove the horizontal drain pan of a multi position coil.

    The mold does seem excessive though. What's the air flow, ∆T & leaving temp/RH? Perhaps airflow is too high & moisture is coming off the coil. Got good filters installed, that are changed regularly?

  • pecmsg
    pecmsg Member Posts: 6,799

    I believe Trane had a model that required removing it when used vertical, others recommended removing if not used.

    Check the IOM.

    Big Ed_4ratiobb12385
  • mattmia2
    mattmia2 Member Posts: 15,689

    maybe set up the t-stat to do a post purge to dry things out a bit.

  • Big Ed_4
    Big Ed_4 Member Posts: 3,375

    The drainage is all wrong … You need a trap for the low pressure drainage and the vent belongs down stream of the trap … I am assuming it is leaking in the crawl space …

    Happy New Year

    There was an error rendering this rich post.

    mattmia2
  • mattmia2
    mattmia2 Member Posts: 15,689

    right, because the evaporator is on the inlet of the blower, the condensate can't drain without a trap. if the drain is open to the atmosphere at the pan the suction from the blower will pull air in and keep the condensate from draining.

  • bb12385
    bb12385 Member Posts: 2

    Thank you all so much for your feedback! Unfortunately there seems to be a shortage of qualified and thorough HVAC techs in this area, at least in my experience. Upon further inspection, I noticed a lot of mold on the coils above the blower fan mostly concentrated to the left side of the unit (which is directly in line with the additional drain pan). I cleaned those coils as much as I could but noticed even more mold above them on the walls of the duct.

    I just did a deep clean on the return plenum and I am in the process of installing foil backed foam board in that area to better seal it off. The filters are changed once a month and I use 20x30x1 MERV 11 filters. I also cleared the drain line from the outside of the house with a shop vac. I suspected something was off with the drain line also. There is a trap in the bottom section below the evaporator coil but it gets clogged and does not seem to drain effectively leading to the pan overflowing and leaking below.

    I have attached some before and after photos of what I have cleaned so far. I am planning to have the ducts cleaned but I want to make sure I resolve the issue that's causing the mold beforehand.

    Thank you all again for your time and insight.

    BEFORE:

    F93719C1-63E9-470E-A046-3A915CABF51D.jpeg 3487FEF0-A949-4AC2-88FA-BE4E1021615E.jpeg C2E7BCB8-74C7-4D46-BD8E-09EB47C36E9E.jpeg 443471EB-393D-47C3-A86A-85D5D40F4BA7.jpeg

    AFTER:

    BD4EAB3C-BBA8-4394-8CE3-C0F09393B7F0.jpeg 61C68307-646F-4311-AA86-B2E4234172CA.jpeg
  • mattmia2
    mattmia2 Member Posts: 15,689

    you will know it is resolved when you don't have a bunch of condensate rush out when the blower stops.