Notice: We request that you don't just set up a new account at this time if you are a previous user.
If you used to be one of our moderators, please feel free to reach out to Chris via the facebook Outerlimits4x4 group and he will get you set back up with access should he need you.
Recovery:If you cannot access your old email address and don't remember your password, please click here to log a change of email address so you can do a password reset.

Air COnditioner Gurus

General Tech Talk

Moderators: toaddog, TWISTY, V8Patrol, Moderators

Posts: 101
Joined: Tue Mar 08, 2005 4:59 pm
Location: weipa

Post by kingchevy »

dumbdunce wrote:
kingchevy wrote:It annoys me seeing people still trying to attempt air-conditioning without a license after all the rubbish people that deal with it have to go through. But I suppose they may not know since they arent actualy in the industrie
relax, read above. I have a licensed guy doing the work.

At the risk of hijacking my own thread, have you ever changed a tap washer? done any mechanical work on any vehicle other than your own? changed a light switch or a power point? these all put you in the same boat as doing ac/fridge work without a license. which I am not. I don't have the skills and I don't have the gear. if you have nothing constructive/helpful to add then please, don't say anything at all.
yes I have changed a tap washer but no I've never plumbed any of my house I've built/bought. and no I havent done any major mechanical work on my car I support my local mechanical workshop by letting them do my work on my own car the only time I have done any major mechanical work on my vehicle is when I built my 75 series with a v8 diesel in it because I couldnt find anyone were I live capable Of doing the work. And I would not in a million years touch 240v a/c youre talking about something that could kill imagine if you did something wrong and youre son or daughter were to get shocked and die from some sub standard faulty work that you did. I pay money to be licensed I pay 1000's a year for training me and my staff.
Posts: 221
Joined: Mon Sep 06, 2004 3:29 pm
Location: Sydney

Post by muzza_fattire »

dumbdunce wrote:
muzza_fattire wrote:
dumbdunce wrote:
suzy wrote: back to the topic,
i remember flushing a system with Argon.?
was flushed with nitrogen. any dry, inert gas should be ok?
Nitrogen is not an inert gas.
there's always one :roll:

no nitrogen is not inert in the purest sense of the word, but for the sake of flushing and drying a refrigeration system, it is far less reactive than oxygen and much dryer than water and those are the things that do the damage and much cheaper than argon and it is what refrigeration mechanics use for such purposes.

thanks for another worthless addition to this thread.
That wasn't meant to be a smartarse comment.

I was more refering to fact that nitrogen is not a member of the Inert Gases (or Noble Gases) in Group 0 of the Periodic Table, rather than the word 'inert' as a description of nitrogen.
You aren't the only one reading this thread and someone else may have been confused and/or misled by the comment.
But, yes, nitrogen is 'almost completely inert'.

Maybe I should have been more descriptive in my post... :oops:
*****************
'88 GQ SWB TD42
Post Reply

Who is online

Users browsing this forum: No registered users and 1 guest