AC Rescue
Corbin Norton House Chilled Water Retrofit – Oak Bluffs
The Norton Residence is the most famous house on Martha’s Vineyard. Built in 1891 by Philip Corbin, manufacturing tycoon, it was the most extravagant summer mansion in the town of Oak Bluffs on Martha’s Vineyard.

After a 100 years of neglect, it was bought in 1991 by Peter Norton, the computer software pioneer, and carefully restored to its former glory through a meticulous restoration. During a fierce winter storm in February of 2001, the home burned to the ground due to an electrical fire. It was then completely rebuilt in 2006 as an exact replica of the original home with the addition of air conditioning.
Air Conditioning Issues (2006 thru 2015)
Unfortunately, though the house itself was gorgeous inside and out, the indoor comfort was consistently compromised by the inadequate air conditioning system. Finally this year Nelson Mechanical Design, Inc. was called in to resolve the AC woes: the system did not adequately cool the house, several compressors had failed, the system was constantly flooding (several leaks through the paneled wood ceilings), and the home was often clammy and humid.
The existing air conditioning system was built around an outside 10 ton MultiAqua air to water chiller that sent chilled to four air handlers inside the home.
Problems with the existing chilled water installation:
3/4 inch copper pipe had been used for all of the chilled water piping so all of the air handlers were getting only half of the required water flow through their coils. In addition to this starvation of the inside coils, the outside chiller was not getting its necessary design water flow either, thus leading to overheating and ultimately the failure of the two outside chiller compressors.
In addition, the manufacturer of the chiller required at least 50 gallons of water in the system but the current system had only 25; this led to excessive on/off cycling of the outside compressors.
At the center of these issues was the use of a single undersized circulator in the entire system to try to meet the flow requirements of all of the equipment; this led to a serious mismatch between the cooling output of the outside chiller and the cooling needs of the house.
No one in the driver’s seat: uncontrolled operation
The existing circulator mindlessly sent chilled water to the four air handlers in the house 24 hours a day for the entire cooling season. It didn’t know if the house needed cooling or not.
Likewise, the outside chiller didn’t know if the house needed cooling or not; it just mindlessly ran to keep the chilled water at 48 F all summer long, 24/7. In addition, without a buffer tank to smooth out the difference between the house’s cooling requirements and the outside chiller’s capacity, for most of the summer the chiller was vastly oversized for the cooling load.
This led to very inefficient operation, way too many start and stop cycles of the outside chiller, reduced reliability, increased wear and tear, reduced comfort, and little or no dehumidification.
Nelson Mechanical Design’s Retrofit Project


On the four air handlers (three in the attic and one in the basement) we installed Belimo motorized ball valves that gave us complete control of the flow of chilled water without any water hammer or noise. We installed Victaulic balancing valves to let us precisely determine and set the chilled water flow through each air handler no more and no less than required.
Existing circulator connecting outside chiller to buffer tank:
We dedicated the existing single circulator to connect the outside 
Grundfos Magna3 pressure sensing circulator connecting buffer tank to air handlers:

New control system: only cooling and chilled water flow when it was needed

If other zones called for cooling, their blowers would start and motorized ball valves would open and the system pressure would drop again; the Magna 3 would see this and speed up some more thereby pumping more chilled water from the buffer tank to each air handler needing chilled water.
Likewise, as each zone was satisfied and there was no need for cooling in that zone, the air handler’s motorized ball valve would close, the chilled water pressure would start to rise, and the Magna 3 circulator in the basement would start to slow down and reduce the pressure of the chilled water.
This pressure sensing circulator would end up pumping only the exact amount of chilled water needed by the air handlers when they needed it; no more 24/7 pumping of chilled water. The end result was consistent AC comfort throughout the home all summer long.
Our goal is to be Martha’s Vineyard’s premier plumbing and HVAC. We appreciate the opportunity to show you some of our work.