18
Codes and Ordinances
V3 Series units have been tested and
certified, by ETL, in accordance with UL
Safety Standard 1995/CSA C22.2 No. 236,
ANSI Safety Standard Z21.47b-2008/CSA
2.3b-2008, and ANSI Safety Standard Z83.8-
2006/CSA 2.6-2006.
System should be sized in accordance with
the
American
Society
of
Heating,
Refrigeration
and
Air
Conditioning
Engineers Handbook.
Installation of V3 Series units must conform
to the ICC standards of the International
Mechanical Code, the International Building
Code, Installation of Air Conditioning and
Ventilating Systems Standard, NFPA 90A,
and local building, plumbing and waste water
codes. All appliances must be electrically
grounded in accordance with local codes, or
in the absence of local codes, the current
National Electric Code, ANSI/NFPA 70 or
the current Canadian Electrical Code CSA
C22.1. Units with gas heaters must conform
to the National Fuel Gas Code ANSI Z223.1
(NFPA 54) in the United States and
Can/CGA-B149 Installation Code in Canada.
Receiving Unit
When received, the unit should be checked
for damage that might have occurred in
transit. If damage is found it should be noted
on the carrier’s Freight Bill. A request for
inspection by carrier’s agent should be made
in writing at once.
Nameplate should be checked to ensure the
correct model sizes and voltages have been
received to match the job requirements.
If repairs must be made to damaged goods,
then the factory should be notified before any
repair action is taken in order to protect the
warranty. Certain equipment alteration,
repair, and manipulation of equipment
without the manufacturer’s consent may void
the product warranty. Contact the AAON
Technical Support for assistance with
handling damaged goods, repairs, and freight
claims: (918) 382-6450.
Note:
Upon receipt check shipment for items
that ship loose such as remote sensors.
Consult order and shipment documentation to
identify potential loose-shipped items.
Loose-shipped items may have been placed
inside unit cabinet for security. Installers and
owners should secure all doors with locks or
nuts and bolts to prevent unauthorized access.
The Clean Air Act of 1990 bans the
intentional venting of refrigerant as of
July 1, 1992. Approved methods of
recovery, recycling, or reclaiming
must be followed.
CAUTION
Coils and sheet metal surfaces
present sharp edges and care must
be
taken
when
working
with
equipment.
WARNING
Failure to observe the following
instructions will result in premature
failure of your system and possible
voiding of the warranty.
WARNING