Hence the reason you should ALWAYS weigh your charge. Then theres no confusion around under or overcharging with given ambients and discrepencies a day later can easily be attributed to a leak or component failure. Overcharging is dangerous. The reclaim unit in the vid is okay for removing refrigerant if your going to dump the old ac units and send the gas away for destruction, but you should never re-use the gas that it recovers. There is no oil seperator in that system and if you suck out a system with contaminated oil then your going to contaminate whatever you put it back into. Oil is held in suspension in refrigerant and once two or three systems are sucked out then the oil in the reclaim compressor is going to be full of crap and small amounts will be transferred to your reclaim jug. Moisture is another big killer and no filtering is in place to combat this either. There should at least be a suction line filter dryer on the suction side but there should also be a filter/dryer on the discharge side. There also appears to no attempt made to purge lines which means the chances of introducing non condensible gases to the very dodgy looking reclaim cylinder is very high, which can cause dangerous pressures in the jug, and would be introduced to the system the gas is going back in to. If your going to be reclaiming and storing refrigerant then you absolutley must have a set of scales. It is extremely dangerous to fill a jug to more than 80% of it's rated capacity. Refrigerant expands in heat and if your jug is overfilled then it's got no where to expand to. It's just plain foolish to rely on the burst disc or relief valve as I have seen many ruptured jugs where the rust or flaw in the metal was weaker than the relief valve. The guy mentioned the smell of the gas from a burnt out system but what he didnt say was that once burnt, a cfc refrigerant (R12, R22) is extremely dangerous. In a compressor burn out the refrigerant components separate into volitile components, one of which is chlorine gas (mustard gas for those that dont know). The same gas that was used to gas troops in the first world war. Even in small amounts this can be deadly. It can burn eyes, nostrils, effect your central nervous system and kill you. Nasty stuff but you will know it if you smell it. It'll feel like someones just lit a match in your nose. All in all not a good idea if you plan on resusing the gas, but for the environmenatlly responsible that just want to recover ozone destroying gas before dumping the unit then I guess it's okay, however no refrigerant recycling center will ever accept that cylinder. As he said, it's illegal. (because it's dangerous).
Sorry if it sounds like I'm lecturing but I hold strong views on the subject and people have died doing this stuff.
Incidentally R134a isnt Freon. Freon is a trade name introduced by Du Pont for CFC and HCFC refigerants many, many years ago and it covers chlorine based (cfc) refrigerants. R134a is an HFC refrigerant called Tetrafluoroethane and contains no chlorine.
Sorry if it sounds like I'm lecturing but I hold strong views on the subject and people have died doing this stuff.
Incidentally R134a isnt Freon. Freon is a trade name introduced by Du Pont for CFC and HCFC refigerants many, many years ago and it covers chlorine based (cfc) refrigerants. R134a is an HFC refrigerant called Tetrafluoroethane and contains no chlorine.
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