Cleaning out old R12 A/C lines

Started by tmsnyder, February 04, 2020, 11:13 PM

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tmsnyder

44 years of crud in my evaporator, condensor and A/C lines, any thoughts on flushing them out?  New compressor.


What if I put a 5 gallon can of gas on a ladder and siphon it down through each item, then blow them out with air?


I'd like to start with a nice clean system. 

DaveVA78Chieftain

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Rickf1985

My first question is are you putting 12 back in or converting to 134? If the systems was closed the whole time and the compressor did not melt down then a simple conversion is all that is needed, although a flush would not hurt but if staying with the original hoses you really should not flush since the old oil is what is sealing the original hoses. If you are going to flush and convert it would be a good idea to go with new 134 compliant hoses. Then be absolutely sure to look up all the specs for the right amount of oil for each component. The compressor is usually filled but you have to find the specs for the dryer, condenser and evaporator and add the appropriate amount of oil. I does not hurt to drain the new compressor into a measuring cup just to be sure it comes out close to the proper amount just to be sure.


And you ARE replacing the dryer and expansion valve aren't you?


I wouldn't use gasoline, acetone maybe but I would definitely replace the hoses.

n2hcky

I have used this on a couple of retrofit jobs.
Cools well and doesn't seem to have any issues.
http://www.frostycool.com/copy-of-frostycool-12a-refrigerant-18-oz-equivalent-1x-can/


For flushing....Buy the solution made to flush systems.  Any left over gas fumes could be bad news under pressure and heat.


Rickf1985


That stuff is butane and is not at all recommended to put in an automotive system. Any leak at all is a recipe for an explosion! And the temperatures in the high pressure side of the system are far above the ignition point of the butane. There were all kinds of bulletins put out when R12 was being eliminated and these hybrids started hitting the market.

tmsnyder

I havent really decided on the refrigerant.  I might do 134a but do have R12a and recently may have found some R12. It can still be had.  But I just want to do it once, putting on a new rebuilt compressor, drier/accumulator, expansion valve, and would like to clean everything really well before pulling a vacuum on it.

Rickf1985

If you are replacing everything, as you should, then just flush the evaporator and condenser and convert to 134. Less hassle if you need to refill on the road.

tmsnyder

Yes I'm slow, took me all summer to get the A/C back together. 

What I ended up doing was putting a 5 gallon can of gas up on a ladder and siphoning it down through each individual component, every hose, the evaporator, the condensor.    Gas could come out cruddy at first then cleared right up but I put the whole 5 gallons through each hose etc.

Blew everything out with air.

Assembled with new orings, The compressor is new along with the accumulator drier, expansion valve. 

Pulled a vacuum on it for a couple days and charged with duracool, 2.5 cans. 

Seems to work well except one day it started blowing fog out the vents, and snowflakes after running a couple hours.   I think the thermal switch in the evaporator which prevents freezing up isn't working so the evaporator iced up.  I did notice the air flow was quite low.  I'll have to check on that some day.  :)rotflmao :)rotflmao

Oz

Wow, it really did work!
Too well... blowing snowflakes  ???
1969 D22, 2 x 1974 D24 Indians, 1977 27' Itasca

tmsnyder

I've added in a second evaporator as well, inside the coach, under a couch.   The GMC is all aluminum and glass, tough to keep cool inside on a hot day.  Tee'd into the hi and lo pressure lines.

Oz

1969 D22, 2 x 1974 D24 Indians, 1977 27' Itasca