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R.P.J wrote:Guys I would like to find out something after you do ac work on your vehicle I see alot of professional ac shops and also amauter ac technican gas up the system by guess, could someone explain to me when they are gassing up the system how much gas to do they put back in your system. Or do they watch the gauges and guess "ok that's enough"
very rare you would see someone uses an ac scale to put in back the correct amount
R.P.J wrote:Ok so tell me this. Could a technican watch the manifold gauges while he is gassing up and say yes that's good?
A proper charge system gives what reading?
Strugglerzinc wrote:They have no way of knowing the correct pressure for each vehicle either.
Weight of gas is usually on the sticker under the bonnet. No manufacturer's FSM tells you to refill an ac system by pressure, but as usual trinis know better.
R.P.J wrote:Ok so tell me this. Could a technician watch the manifold gauges while he is gassing up and say yes that's good?
A proper charge system gives what reading?
skylinechild wrote:Strugglerzinc wrote:They have no way of knowing the correct pressure for each vehicle either.
Weight of gas is usually on the sticker under the bonnet. No manufacturer's FSM tells you to refill an ac system by pressure, but as usual trinis know better.
^^^^ THIS ^^^^^ don't forget the trinis who feel dey know more than the manufacturer...pressure testing and checkin for leaks......not a UV tool in sight...I wouldn't even mention the sniffer tool.R.P.J wrote:Ok so tell me this. Could a technician watch the manifold gauges while he is gassing up and say yes that's good?
A proper charge system gives what reading?
A "proper charge" (if youre using the scale method) depends on ambient temperature as well as other factors.
the correct method would be to weigh out the refrigerant and then put it into the system but most ac techs rely on watching the gauge.
as temp increases pressure levels also increase so lets say if the supplying R134 cylinder was left out in the sun for a good while......and the tech then takes the cylinder to charge up a automotive system....for a car that's already hot...and in the sun....again for a long while.....how much refrigerant will actually be goin into the car.??
R.P.J wrote:Temp-pressure-chart-33776F1.jpgr134apc1-300x196.jpg
Ok guys so what reading would give you a properly charge system.
nervewrecker wrote:Leme ask you kids a question:
If I take a can of coke and put it in the sun, I take another and put it in the fridge.
Does the amount of coke in each can change due to the temperature?
Similarly, for a closed system such as an ac system, does the amount of refrigerant change when the temp does?
nervewrecker wrote:If I was to take two glasses of water, one at 10 deg c and the next at 60 deg c full to the brim, do they have the same amount of liquid?
No, one has less and one has more. If I was to connect a pressure gauge at the bottom of each glass and measure the pressure exerted by the column of liquid I'd know this. And I can use the pressure to determine how much water is in the glass and make sure each has the same amount.
Yay or nay?
So can we use pressure to determine how much of a fluid is in a system?
nervewrecker wrote:Leme ask you kids a question:
If I take a can of coke and put it in the sun, I take another and put it in the fridge.
Does the amount of coke in each can change due to the temperature?
Similarly, for a closed system such as an ac system, does the amount of refrigerant change when the temp does?
viedcht wrote:You could correlate the weight via volume with the cylinder...?
bluesclues wrote:viedcht wrote:You could correlate the weight via volume with the cylinder...?
I would expect that to be a standard practice the volume of the cyclinder is written somewhere on it or in the model name.
nervewrecker wrote:bluesclues wrote:viedcht wrote:You could correlate the weight via volume with the cylinder...?
I would expect that to be a standard practice the volume of the cyclinder is written somewhere on it or in the model name.
Why do we need to know the volume? It's always the same no matter the amount of gas in it. The container don't get bigger or smaller.
nervewrecker wrote:bluesclues wrote:viedcht wrote:You could correlate the weight via volume with the cylinder...?
I would expect that to be a standard practice the volume of the cyclinder is written somewhere on it or in the model name.
Why do we need to know the volume? It's always the same no matter the amount of gas in it. The container don't get bigger or smaller.
nervewrecker wrote:Not supposed to use pressure alone either. If place is cold and there isnt much heat to dissipate the pressure will read low so you keep adding.
As soon as things heat up the pressure will go up and guess what.... your system overcharged.
The original question was if you can use pressure to find out if a system is properly charged. I replied yes and I stand by my answer. If I'm not mistaken I said pressure and temp, not so?
The original question also asked if you can use weight. The answer is also yes but you don't have to.
If someone comes in and want to know if they have enough refrigerant in their system are you going to take it out and weigh it? Leme hear you smartasses now...
nervewrecker wrote:Still no.
I ain't hearing the terms of what I looking for.
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