McQuay centrifugal chiller at Sprint data center plant room with components laid out for full teardown and rebuild

Commercial & Industrial HVAC Projects — Hartzell’s Heat & Air

Hartzell’s has been doing complex mechanical work for 15+ years. These project case studies document some of the large-scope industrial and commercial HVAC work we’ve completed — from centrifugal chiller rebuilds at data centers to liquid refrigerant motor cooling on active oil and gas processing sites. Every project is documented, delivered on schedule, and backed by our master HVAC license.

Industrial HVAC  ·  Chiller Service  ·  Oil & Gas Facilities  ·  Call 405-375-4822



Watch: Commercial HVAC Job Walkthrough

Go behind the scenes on a real commercial HVAC job with Hartzell’s. Our bilingual technician walks you through what we’re doing and why — in English and en Español.

Project: McQuay Centrifugal Chiller Rebuild — Sprint Data Center, DFW

Client
Sprint (Data Center)

Equipment
McQuay Centrifugal Chiller

Location
DFW Area, Texas

Outcome
Full Rebuild — Recommissioned

A Sprint data center in the DFW area experienced a chiller failure traced to a factory defect in the McQuay centrifugal compressor. The unit had to be completely torn down — compressor disassembled, rotor shaft and impeller wheel removed, defective components identified and replaced — and rebuilt to manufacturer specification before recommissioning.

The scale of this work required chain hoist rigging inside the plant room, precision measurement of all machined surfaces, factory-spec replacement parts, and a documented commissioning process. The chiller was successfully returned to full operation. For a data center, chiller downtime is measured in dollars per minute — this project required both technical depth and logistical execution.

McQuay centrifugal chiller plant room full teardown at Sprint data center DFW
Full chiller plant room during teardown — McQuay centrifugal chiller disassembled for factory-defect rebuild at Sprint data center
Technician working on McQuay chiller compressor with chain hoist showing scale of machine
Scale of the McQuay centrifugal chiller — chain hoist rigging required to access and remove compressor components

Teardown — Finding the Factory Defect

McQuay chiller large-bore flanged refrigerant circuit piping and compressor connections
Refrigerant circuit — large-bore flanged connections at the McQuay compressor inlet and outlet
Factory defect evidence burned bearing journal in McQuay centrifugal chiller compressor
The factory defect — burned and scored bearing journal identified during teardown. This was the root cause of failure.
McQuay chiller precision rotor shaft removed and laid out for inspection and measurement
Precision rotor shaft removed from compressor and laid out for dimensional inspection before replacement

Rebuild & Recommissioning

McQuay centrifugal chiller compressor impeller wheel removed during factory defect rebuild
Centrifugal compressor impeller wheel — removed, inspected, and reinstalled to factory specification
Two technicians reassembling McQuay centrifugal chiller compressor with chain hoist at Sprint data center
Reassembly — Hartzell’s technicians reinstalling compressor components using chain hoist rigging
McQuay chiller control panel showing Unit Status Running after successful rebuild and commissioning
Commissioning complete — McQuay chiller control panel confirms Unit Status: Running. Data center cooling restored.

Project: Liquid Refrigerant Motor Cooling — Marathon Oil / Teco-Westinghouse, Omega & Coalton, OK

Client
Marathon Oil / Teco-Westinghouse

System
Parker Liquid Refrigerant Pump Cooling

Location
Omega & Coalton, Oklahoma

Outcome
Under Budget & Ahead of Schedule

In a joint venture with Teco-Westinghouse, Hartzell’s designed and installed a compressorless liquid refrigerant pump cooling system at Marathon Oil’s natural gas processing facilities in Omega and Coalton, Oklahoma. The Teco-Westinghouse motors at these sites pump natural gas hundreds of miles through the pipeline to Houston — they run continuously and generate significant heat loads that require precise management.

The solution was Parker liquid cooling units circulating refrigerant through motor cooling jackets and back to remote heat exchangers — no compressor in the circuit, just a pump. Highly reliable and low-maintenance, well-suited to remote oil field operation. The project came in under budget and ahead of schedule.

Hartzell's service van at Marathon Oil natural gas processing facility Oklahoma
Hartzell’s on-site at Marathon Oil — Omega, Oklahoma natural gas processing facility
Parker liquid refrigerant cooling units at Oklahoma natural gas processing facility
Parker liquid cooling units — compressorless refrigerant pump system for large Teco-Westinghouse pipeline motors

Project: High-Efficiency Boiler Upgrade — Cornerstone Bank, Watonga, OK

Client
Cornerstone Bank

Equipment
Laars NeoTherm High-Efficiency Boiler

Location
Watonga, Oklahoma

Outcome
High-Efficiency Upgrade Complete

Hartzell’s replaced an aging commercial boiler at Cornerstone Bank in Watonga, Oklahoma with a new Laars NeoTherm high-efficiency unit. The project involved full decommissioning of the original system, new venting and piping, and complete installation and startup of the replacement boiler.

Old commercial hot water boiler at Cornerstone Bank in Watonga Oklahoma before replacement
Before — aging commercial boiler at Cornerstone Bank, Watonga, OK. Due for high-efficiency replacement.
Completed Laars NeoTherm high-efficiency commercial boiler installation at Cornerstone Bank Watonga Oklahoma
After — Laars NeoTherm high-efficiency boiler installed and commissioned. Cornerstone Bank, Watonga, OK.


Project: Custom 400-Ton Chiller Plant — Telecom Data Center

Client
Telecom Data Center

Capacity
400 Tons — Custom Build

Scope
Design, Build & Commissioning

Controls
Custom Hand-Built Panel

This project involved the design, build, and commissioning of a custom 400-ton chiller plant at a telecom data center facility. Unlike standard packaged equipment, this system was engineered and assembled to fit the specific cooling load and physical constraints of the facility — including a cooling tower installed in a purpose-built concrete equipment pit, custom-fabricated chilled water piping routed across the roof, and a hand-wired custom control panel built specifically for this system.

Telecom and data center facilities operate 24/7 with zero tolerance for cooling failures. The control panel was built from the ground up with relay logic, contactors, and fusing sized for this specific load — giving the facility operators a system designed for their exact requirements rather than a generic off-the-shelf solution. Preventive maintenance agreements (PMA) were established on commissioning to keep the system operating at design specifications long-term.

400-ton custom chiller plant aerial view in walled equipment courtyard at telecom data center
Aerial view of the complete 400-ton chiller plant — custom cooling tower in concrete pit with insulated pipe runs

400-ton cooling tower installed in concrete equipment pit at telecom data center facility
Custom cooling tower in purpose-built concrete equipment pit — sized for 400-ton chilled water load

Custom hand-wired HVAC control panel with relay logic fuses and contactors for 400-ton chiller system
Custom control panel — hand-wired relay logic, fusing, and contactors built specifically for this 400-ton system

400-ton chiller interior showing pump motor refrigerant piping and electrical conduit
Inside the chiller unit — pump motor, refrigerant and chilled water piping, and electrical conduit

Large insulated chilled water pipes staged on roof skids during 400-ton chiller installation
Insulated chilled water supply and return pipes staged on roof skids during installation



Project: Full Residential HVAC Replacement — Trane Heat Pump System

Equipment
Trane Heat Pump — Dual-System Install

Scope
Full Replacement: Old Carrier Out, Trane In

Location
Central Oklahoma

When your system has been running past its service life, you are not just paying for repairs — you are paying for a unit that is working harder every season to keep up. This homeowner was there: an aging Carrier system packed into a tight utility space alongside a water heater, limping through Oklahoma summers on borrowed time. We pulled it out, sized the replacement correctly with a Manual J load calculation, and put in a Trane heat pump system that will handle what this climate actually demands. Two outdoor units, properly matched indoor coils, a clean install. That is how a change-out should go.

Old Carrier furnace and water heater in cramped utility closet before HVAC replacement
Before — the old Carrier furnace crowded in with a water heater. Running past its service life, working hard to hold temperature.
New HVAC system being installed at Oklahoma rural home during full system replacement
Mid-install — new equipment staged and going in. Every replacement starts with the right sizing, not just swapping what was there.
Two Trane heat pump outdoor condenser units installed at Oklahoma home
Completed — two Trane heat pump outdoor units installed, matched and commissioned. Clean, correct, and built for Oklahoma weather.

What this project included: Full system removal and disposal, Manual J load calculation for proper sizing, Trane heat pump outdoor and indoor units, refrigerant line set, new thermostat, electrical whip, complete startup and commissioning.

Project: 20,000-Amp Battery Backup Build-Out & Raised Floor Precision Cooling

Facility
Telecom Data Center

DC Plant
20,000-Amp Battery Backup

Cooling System
Precision CRAC + Raised Floor

Environment
Mission-Critical, 24/7

This project involved the HVAC build-out for a 20,000-amp DC battery backup facility at a telecom data center. Large battery string rooms generate significant and continuous heat loads — the batteries must be kept within a tight temperature range to maintain charge capacity and prevent thermal runaway. Overheating a DC plant is not an option.

The cooling solution was precision CRAC (Computer Room Air Conditioning) units combined with a raised floor cold air distribution system. Perforated floor tiles direct chilled air exactly where the battery strings generate heat — efficient, targeted, and scalable. This is a different discipline than residential or even standard commercial HVAC: precision cooling requires tight temperature and humidity tolerances maintained continuously, with no allowance for downtime.

Telecom data center 20000 amp battery backup room with rows of battery strings raised floor and cable tray
Battery room overview — rows of 20,000A battery strings, raised floor cooling tiles, and overhead cable tray at telecom data center

Raised floor perforated cooling tiles for cold air distribution in data center battery room
Raised floor system — perforated tiles direct chilled air precisely to battery string heat loads

Precision CRAC cooling unit on wall serving telecom battery backup room with raised floor cold air distribution
Wall-mounted CRAC precision cooling unit serving battery room C9 — maintains tight temperature for battery string longevity

Precision CRAC unit installed between large battery string racks in telecom DC power plant room
CRAC unit installed between battery racks — precision cooling positioned at the heat source in the DC plant room


Project: Copper-Clad Lightning Protection Grounding System — Data Center

Facility
Telecom Data Center

Specification
0.002Ω Ground Resistance

Method
Exothermic Cadweld Welding

Electrodes
Copper-Clad Ground Plates & Rods

This project required installing a copper-clad lightning protection grounding system at a telecom data center to a specification of 0.002 ohms ground resistance — an extremely tight requirement that only permanent molecular-bond connections can achieve and hold long-term. Standard commercial grounding requires 25 ohms or less. Critical facilities require 5 ohms. At 0.002 ohms, every connection and every electrode must be engineered precisely.

The copper-clad electrode plates and rods were bonded using exothermic (cadweld) welding — a process that uses a controlled thermite reaction to melt copper and flow it permanently around the joint, creating a molecular bond between conductors. Unlike mechanical connections that corrode and loosen over time, a properly executed cadweld connection is rated for the life of the facility. Every joint was tested to confirm the resistance specification before burial and backfill.

Copper-clad ground electrode plate being buried for 0.002 ohm lightning protection grounding system
Copper-clad ground electrode plate — large-format copper electrode being set for burial in the grounding system

Exothermic cadweld weld firing with thermite reaction smoke joining copper conductors in grounding trench
Cadweld weld firing — the thermite charge ignites, melting copper to flow into and permanently bond the joint. The smoke is from the reaction.

Completed exothermic cadweld weld joining three copper conductors showing mushroom-shaped solidified copper
Completed cadweld weld — three copper conductors permanently joined. The mushroom-shaped solidified copper is the result of the thermite pour. Molecular bond, not mechanical.

Concrete access vault showing buried copper cadweld connection in completed lightning protection ground ring
Concrete access vault — completed cadweld connection in the buried ground ring. Permanent, corrosion-resistant, tested to 0.002Ω.

Why 0.002 ohms matters: At this resistance level, a lightning strike or power fault is dissipated into the earth almost instantaneously — protecting sensitive electronics, preventing ground potential rise, and keeping personnel safe. Achieving and verifying this spec requires precise electrode selection, proper soil preparation, and cadweld connections that won’t degrade. Mechanical connections simply cannot hold this specification over time.


Project: Large Cummins Generator Installation — Secured Data Center

Equipment
Cummins Diesel Generator Set

Facility
Secured Data Center

Rigging
Grove Crane — Precision Placement

Operation
24/7 Mission-Critical Backup Power

Installing a large Cummins diesel generator at a secured data center is not a standard job. The facility operates 24/7 with no tolerance for power interruption — the generator is the last line of defense when utility power fails. Installation required coordinating a Grove crane to lift the generator enclosure over the security perimeter and set it precisely on a prepared concrete pad alongside the building, with workers guiding the unit from multiple positions during the lift.

Beyond the rigging, generator installation at this level involves fuel system connections, automatic transfer switch (ATS) integration, load bank testing, and coordination with the facility’s electrical team. The generator must transfer to load within seconds of a utility outage and sustain full facility power for an extended run. Getting this right the first time is not optional.

Large Cummins generator set on flatbed truck being delivered to secured data center for installation
Delivery day — Cummins generator set on flatbed, workers in hard hats coordinating the rigging setup

Cummins generator enclosure crane-lifted over razor wire security fence into secured data center
Generator enclosure cleared the security perimeter — crane-lifted over the razor wire fence into the secured facility

Generator enclosure crane-lifted against concrete block building wall with workers guiding placement
Four workers coordinating the lift — generator enclosure hoisted against the concrete block building

Technician in hard hat guiding Cummins generator enclosure into final position during crane lowering
Technician guiding the generator enclosure into its final position as the crane lowers it to the pad

Cummins generator set installed on concrete pad at secured data center with Grove crane on site
Generator set on pad — Grove crane and flatbed still on site after completing the installation


Project: 1,500 KW Generator PMA — Commercial Data Center

Equipment
Cummins 1,500 KW Generator Sets

Contract
Preventive Maintenance Agreement

Requirement
4 Certified Techs On-Call 24/7

Operation
Mission-Critical, Zero Downtime

Retaining a preventive maintenance agreement on 1,500 KW commercial generator sets at a data center is not a matter of scheduling tune-ups. The contract required Hartzell’s to maintain four fully trained and certified technicians available around the clock — any one of whom could respond to this facility, know the equipment cold, and handle whatever they found. That’s an organizational commitment, not just a service call.

Preventive maintenance on generators of this scale covers fluid analysis, load bank testing, transfer switch exercise, cooling system inspection, fuel system integrity, battery condition, and full documentation for the facility’s compliance records. A generator that fails to start during a utility outage is worse than no generator at all — because someone signed off that it was ready.

Two Cummins 1500 KW generator sets in dedicated generator building at commercial data center
Generator room — two Cummins 1,500 KW units with stainless exhaust, drip pans, and dedicated building. Hartzell’s held the PMA on this facility.

Multiple large Cummins generator sets in generator room at commercial data center PMA
Looking down the generator room — multiple Cummins units, large exhaust manifolds, and stainless piping. Four techs had to know every inch of this room.

Young aspiring HVAC technician in hard hat and safety glasses reading Cummins generator control panel at data center
Hard hat. Safety glasses. Soccer jersey. Already reading the control panel. — PMA day at the data center.

Young technician in hard hat standing next to 1500 KW Cummins generator at commercial data center
1,500 KW — the NFPA placard and the scale say everything. Preventive maintenance day at the data center.

On passing it down: Dave Hartzell has been bringing his daughter to job sites since she was old enough to wear a hard hat. She learned what 1,500 KW looks like before she finished junior high. That’s how a 35-year-old company stays technically sharp — the knowledge doesn’t just stay in a manual, it gets handed down in person, on the equipment, in the field.


Project: Commercial Generator PMA — Halon-Protected Critical Facility

Equipment
Multiple Cummins Generator Sets

Fire Suppression
Halon 1301 System

Contract
Preventive Maintenance Agreement

Facility Class
Tier-1 Critical Infrastructure

Halon 1301 fire suppression is used in facilities where a conventional sprinkler system would destroy the equipment it was meant to protect — data centers, telecom switching centers, financial institutions, and government facilities. When you see that warning sign at a generator room entrance, you know the client operates at the highest level of criticality. Hartzell’s held the preventive maintenance agreement on this facility’s generator plant.

The generator room houses multiple Cummins units on containment pads with stainless exhaust and dedicated ventilation — a clean, well-engineered installation. The PMA covered regular load testing, fluid analysis, transfer switch exercise, fuel system checks, and full documentation. Entry requires hearing protection. The maintenance log stays current. The generators start when called.

Generator room entry safety station with earmuffs earplug dispenser and Halon 1301 fire suppression warning at critical facility
Entry protocol — ear protection required, Halon 1301 suppression system active. This station outside the door tells you exactly what kind of facility is inside.

Multiple Cummins generator sets on yellow containment pads in commercial data center generator room
Generator room — multiple Cummins units on containment pads, stainless exhaust runs overhead, ventilation louvers on both walls. Maintenance clipboard visible on unit 1.

Cummins Generator 2 with twin stainless exhaust stacks on containment pad at commercial data center
Generator 2 close-up — twin stainless exhaust stacks, containment base, and control panel. Every unit on this PMA was documented and tested on schedule.

Cummins generator room with containment pads stainless exhaust and clean epoxy floor at commercial data center
The full room — clean floor, proper containment, maintained equipment. A generator room that looks like this is a generator room that will start under load.


Project: McQuay Air-Cooled Chiller Service — Halon 1301 Critical Data Center

Equipment
McQuay ALS170 Air-Cooled Water Chiller

Refrigerant
R-22 — 325 lbs, Dual Circuit

Fire Suppression
Halon 1301 — Six-Cylinder Bank

Environment
Mission-Critical, 24/7 Raised Floor

Servicing a chiller plant at a Halon 1301–protected data center is a different level of responsibility. The McQuay ALS170 air-cooled water chiller — dual circuit, 325 lbs of R-22, three dedicated pump motors driving the chilled water loop — is what keeps that raised-floor data center at temperature. When it goes down, the facility’s cooling goes down. There is no acceptable window for a chiller outage in a mission-critical environment.

The Halon 1301 system in the suppression room tells you exactly what class of facility this is. Six cylinders on a red manifold, ready to discharge at the first sign of fire — protecting equipment that cannot tolerate water suppression. Working in this environment means following facility protocols, knowing exactly what you’re touching, and getting it right the first time. That’s what holding service contracts at these facilities requires.

Technician standing next to six Halon 1301 suppression cylinders on red manifold at data center suppression room
Six Halon 1301 cylinders on red manifold — dedicated suppression room at the data center. This is what fire protection looks like in a facility where water would cause more damage than the fire.

Halon protected data center interior with raised floor cable trays and server racks
The data center floor — raised tile, overhead cable tray in every color, server racks along the wall. The chiller plant and Halon system exist to keep this room running.

McQuay ALS170 air-cooled water chiller exterior at data center with insulated piping and R-22 hazmat label
McQuay ALS170 — air-cooled water chiller, R-22, dual circuit. The insulated piping array feeds the chilled water loop serving the data center floor.

Aerial view of data center outdoor condenser array with three large multi-fan banks and refrigerant piping
Condenser yard from above — three large multi-fan banks plus smaller units, all piped to the chilled water plant. Scale of the outdoor cooling infrastructure.

Three red hydronic pump motors on chilled water loop for McQuay chiller at data center
Hydronic pump skid — three red pump motors driving the chilled water loop continuously. These don’t stop.

Project: Large-Scale New Construction HVAC Install — Central Oklahoma

Type
New Construction — Full HVAC System
Scope
Air Handler, Plenum, Full Sheet Metal Duct System
Location
Central Oklahoma
Build
Spray Foam Envelope — High-Performance

New construction means one chance to get the duct system right. On this large central Oklahoma build, Hartzell’s designed and installed a full custom sheet metal duct system — fabricated on-site, fitted to a spray foam attic envelope, and sized by Manual J load calculation. The two-man crew ran trunk mains the length of the building, cut and fit all branch takeoffs, and set the air handler and main plenum before drywall went up. Every connection sealed, every run supported — no flex duct shortcuts on a build like this.

New construction HVAC air handler and sheet metal plenum — central Oklahoma

Air handler and main plenum set before drywall

Hartzell's two-man crew installing sheet metal trunk ductwork in spray-foam attic

Two-man crew running trunk duct in spray-foam attic

Full sheet metal duct system in new construction attic — Oklahoma

Complete duct layout — trunk mains, branch boxes, all sheet metal

Long trunk duct runs in new construction attic — central Oklahoma

Trunk duct runs span the full building length

Hartzell's technician fitting sheet metal duct in new construction attic

Making connections — every joint fitted and sealed

Sheet metal trunk and branch duct boxes in new construction attic — Oklahoma

Branch duct takeoffs spaced along the trunk main

Project: Commercial Dehumidification System — Quest Multi-Unit Install, Oklahoma

Equipment
Quest Commercial Dehumidifiers — Multi-Unit
Scope
Ceiling-Mount Install, Ductwork Integration
Location
Oklahoma

Precision humidity control in a commercial indoor facility requires more than a standard HVAC system. This project involved ceiling-mounting multiple Quest commercial dehumidifiers, integrating them with the existing ductwork and circulation system, and balancing airflow across the full facility footprint. Quest units are purpose-built for high-latent-load environments — Hartzell’s supplied and installed the complete system to spec.

Quest commercial dehumidifiers ceiling-mounted in Oklahoma indoor facility — Hartzell’s Heat & Air

Multiple Quest dehumidifiers installed with ductwork integration — Hartzell’s Heat & Air

Why Industrial & Commercial Clients Choose Hartzell’s

  • Documented project history — data centers, oil field, pipeline, commercial facilities
  • Specialty system knowledge — centrifugal chillers, liquid refrigerant cooling, large boilers
  • Project management capability — joint ventures, multi-phase projects, contractor coordination
  • Master HVAC License + NATE certified — fully licensed for all mechanical work in Oklahoma
  • On-time, under-budget track record — industrial clients can’t afford overruns
  • Employee-owned for 15+ years — the same accountability, over 35 years

Frequently Asked Questions

What types of industrial and commercial HVAC projects does Hartzell’s take on?

Hartzell’s has experience with centrifugal chiller teardown and rebuild, liquid refrigerant pump motor cooling systems, large commercial boiler replacement, data center cooling, oil and gas processing facility HVAC, and large-scale new construction mechanical work. We work directly and in joint ventures with engineering firms and facility operators.

Can Hartzell’s diagnose and rebuild a chiller with a factory defect?

Yes. On the Sprint data center project, we performed a complete teardown of a McQuay centrifugal chiller, identified a factory defect in the compressor, replaced the affected components, and recommissioned the unit to full operation. This type of work requires both chiller expertise and project management capability.

Does Hartzell’s work outside of Oklahoma?

We are based in Kingfisher, Oklahoma and primarily serve central and western Oklahoma. However, for the right industrial project we have worked regionally — including the Sprint data center chiller rebuild in the DFW area. Contact us to discuss your project scope and location.

How does Hartzell’s handle large-scope industrial projects?

We have managed large industrial HVAC projects from initial scoping through commissioning, including joint ventures with engineering firms. Our track record includes projects delivered on time and under budget. Call 405-375-4822 to discuss your requirements.



Project: Geothermal Ground Loop & ClimateMaster System Installation

Equipment
ClimateMaster GeoElite Geothermal

Loop Type
Vertical Bore + Horizontal Trenching

Credential
IGSHPA Accredited Installer

Location
Central Oklahoma

Geothermal is not complicated to install if you know what you are doing. It is complicated if you do not. Hartzell’s holds IGSHPA accreditation — one of very few shops in Oklahoma that do — because geothermal done wrong is not just inefficient, it is expensive to fix. This project involved both vertical boring and horizontal loop trenching depending on the lot layout, paired with a ClimateMaster GeoElite system inside. The ground loop was sized and grouted correctly. The unit was commissioned to specification. Oklahoma red clay does not make this easy. We have been doing it long enough that we know what it takes.

Hartzell's Heat & Air truck at geothermal drill rig site in Oklahoma new construction
Hartzell’s on site — geothermal loop installation begins with the right equipment and the right plan for this lot’s soil and space.
Geothermal ground loop drill rig boring vertical well into Oklahoma red clay
Vertical boring into Oklahoma red clay — each bore hole is grouted to ensure proper thermal transfer for the life of the loop.
Geothermal ground loop horizontal trenches being excavated for loop field installation
Horizontal loop field trenched and staged for loop pipe installation — properly separated runs, correct depth for Oklahoma ground temperatures.
ClimateMaster geothermal heat pump unit installed in mechanical room of custom Oklahoma home
ClimateMaster GeoElite completed in the mechanical room — commissioned, documented, and ready for first season.

What this project included: Site evaluation and loop field design, vertical boring and/or horizontal trenching, loop pipe installation and grouting, ClimateMaster GeoElite system, loop connection and purging, full commissioning and documentation. Eligible for CKenergy, OG&E, and PSO utility rebates depending on service territory.


Project: 60-Ton Commercial Rooftop Unit System — Oklahoma Gas Processing Facility

Equipment
Carrier Commercial RTU — 60 Tons Total

Scope
Commercial Rooftop Units + Custom Ductwork

Client Type
Industrial — Natural Gas Processing

Location
Oklahoma

Commercial rooftop units at 60 tons of capacity require the same discipline as any industrial installation — proper sizing, engineered ductwork, and a technician who has actually read the plans. This project at an Oklahoma natural gas processing facility involved multiple carrier rooftop units with custom sheet metal distribution, control panel integration, and full commissioning. Dave reviewed the engineering drawings on site before a single unit went up. That is not a formality. That is how you avoid a $60,000 mistake on a system that is expected to run without interruption.

Dave Hartzell reviewing engineering blueprints and schematics at Oklahoma gas processing plant
Plans reviewed before work starts — Dave going through the engineering drawings on site. Every commercial job starts here.
Dave Hartzell servicing commercial HVAC control panel at Oklahoma gas processing facility
Control panel commissioned and tested — every circuit confirmed before the system goes live.
Dave Hartzell with 60-ton Carrier commercial rooftop HVAC units and custom sheet metal ductwork
60 tons of Carrier commercial rooftop equipment installed — custom sheet metal ductwork fabricated and fitted to match the building.
Commercial HVAC and mechanical installation at Oklahoma gas processing plant motor controls and cooling
Mechanical room work — motor controls, cooling connections, distribution piping. Industrial work requires industrial documentation standards.

What this project included: Engineering drawing review and field verification, Carrier commercial rooftop unit installation, custom sheet metal ductwork, control panel integration, full system commissioning and documentation.


Project: Industrial HVAC Service — Natural Gas Processing Facility, Oklahoma

Client Type
Natural Gas Processing — Oil Field

Systems
Liquid Refrigerant Cooling — Motor Controls

Environment
Hazardous — Hard Hat Required

Location
Oklahoma Oil Field

Oil field and natural gas processing facilities are not forgiving environments. Cooling failures in a motor control room or a gas processing bay are not just an inconvenience — they are a production stoppage and a safety event. Hartzell’s has the industrial experience and the certifications to work in these environments. Hard hat on, work order in hand, following industrial safety protocols from the moment we pull on site. This is the kind of work most HVAC shops in Oklahoma simply do not do. We do it because we have the background, and because facilities like these need a company that takes documentation and safety as seriously as they do.

Hartzell's Heat & Air van at industrial natural gas processing facility with crane and staging equipment
On site — Hartzell’s at an Oklahoma natural gas processing facility. Crane operations visible in background. Industrial work requires industrial preparation.
Hartzell's technician in hard hat servicing liquid refrigerant cooling connections at industrial facility
Hard hat on, connections inspected — liquid refrigerant cooling system service at an oil field facility. No shortcuts in an environment like this.

Capabilities demonstrated: Industrial HVAC service in hazardous environments, liquid refrigerant cooling system maintenance and repair, motor control room cooling, oil field safety protocols, complete service documentation.

Have a Large-Scope Project?

We work with facility operators, general contractors, and engineering firms. Call to discuss your project requirements.

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