Engineering Manual
Table Of Contents
- Convergence of Technology, Innovation, Flexibility, & Style
- Unit Nomenclature
- Outdoor Unit Overview
- Indoor Unit Overview
- Controls and Options Overview
- Art Cool Mirror Indoor Units
- General Data / Specifications
- Dimensions
- Cooling Capacity Table
- Heating Capacity Table
- Acoustic Data
- Air Velocity and Temperature Distribution
- Refrigerant Flow Diagram
- Wiring Diagram
- Factory Supplied Parts and Materials
- Installation and Best Layout Practices
- Art Cool Gallery Indoor Units
- General Data / Specifications
- Dimensions
- Cooling Capacity Table
- Heating Capacity Table
- Acoustic Data
- Air Velocity and Temperature Distribution
- Refrigerant Flow Diagram
- Wiring Diagram
- Factory Supplied Parts and Materials
- Installation and Best Layout Practices
- Standard Wall-Mounted Indoor Units
- General Data / Specifications
- Dimensions
- Cooling Capacity Table
- Heating Capacity Table
- Acoustic Data
- Air Velocity and Temperature Distribution
- Refrigerant Flow Diagram
- Wiring Diagram
- Factory Supplied Parts and Materials
- Installation and Best Layout Practices
- Duct (Low Static) Indoor Units
- General Data / Specifications
- Dimensions
- Cooling Capacity Table
- Heating Capacity Table
- External Static Pressure
- Acoustic Data
- Refrigerant Flow Diagrams
- Wiring Diagram
- Factory Supplied Parts and Materials
- Installation and Best Layout Practices
- Duct (High Static) Indoor Units
- General Data / Specifications
- Dimensions
- Cooling Capacity Table
- Heating Capacity Table
- External Static Pressure / Acoustic Data
- Refrigerant Flow Diagrams
- Wiring Diagrams
- Factory Supplied Parts and Materials / Installation
- Installation and Best Layout Practices
- Four-Way Ceiling Cassette Indoor Units
- General Data / Specifications
- Dimensions
- Dimensions
- Cooling Capacity Table
- Heating Capacity Table
- Acoustic Data
- Air Velocity and Temperature Distribution
- Refrigerant Flow Diagram
- Wiring Diagram
- Factory Supplied Parts and Materials
- Installation and Best Layout Practices
- Vertical-Horizontal Indoor Units
- General Data / Specifications
- Dimensions
- Cooling Capacity Table
- Heating Capacity Table
- External Static Pressure
- Acoustic Data
- Refrigerant Flow Diagram
- Wiring Diagram
- Factory Supplied Parts and Materials
- Installation and Best Layout Practices
- Equipment Selection Procedure
- Building Ventilation Design Guide
- Placement Considerations
- Refrigerant Piping Design
- Design Guideline Summary
- Creating a Balanced System / Manual Layout Procedure
- LG Engineered Multi F MAX Y-Branch Kit
- Refrigerant Charge
- Installation & Layout Best Practices
- Refrigerant Piping System Layout
- Piping Insulation
- Condensate Drain Piping
- Y-Branch Kit
- Wiring Connections
- Power Wiring (208-230V) and Communications Cable Details
- Indoor Unit Group Control
- Acronyms
Method 3: Unconditioned Outdoor Air Ducted to Indoor Units
Untreated outdoor air is channeled through a duct system that is piped to the return air duct on Multi F ducted indoor units or to the frame of
Multi F four-way cassettes.
Advantages
• May require less ductwork if indoor units are
placed near outdoor walls or a roof deck.
• Controls must be interlocked to shut off the
outdoor air supply fan when the space is
unoccupied.
• Third-party demand-control ventilation
controls may be installed to regulate outdoor
intake based on the CO
2
levels of the
occupied space.
Disadvantages
• Fan(s) will be required to push outdoor air to the indoor unit to overcome the additional
static pressure.
• Filter required to be added to the outdoor air duct.
• Ducted and four-way cassette models are the only indoor units that accept the connection
of an outdoor air duct to the unit case.
• In most cases, in lieu of using the factory mounted return-air thermistor on indoor units, a
remote wall temperature sensor or zone controller will be needed to provide an accurate
reading of the conditioned area temperature.
• Unconditioned outdoor air may affect indoor unit performance, which may necessitate
oversizing the indoor unit.
Outside air may ow backward through the return air-lter grille when the indoor unit fan speed slows or stops in response to changes in the
space load. This may result in captured particulate on the lter media being blown back into the conditioned space.
OA Wall Cap
Damper
Inline Fan
with Filter
Figure 250: Unconditioned Outdoor Air Ducted to Indoor Units.
BUILDING VENTILATION DESIGN GUIDE
Due to our policy of continuous product innovation, some specications may change without notication.
©LG Electronics U.S.A., Inc., Englewood Cliffs, NJ. All rights reserved. “LG” is a registered trademark of LG Corp.
182 | APPLICATION GUIDELINES
Multi F and Multi F MAX Indoor Unit Engineering Manual
MULTI
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