That sounds reasonable to me. I have in my home, a very large (22,000 BTU) through-the-wall air conditioner, designed to cool three large rooms. It uses 3.5 lbs of freon. A whole-house unit I can easily see using as much as 9 lbs.
Yes, depending on how long the lines are. The unit should have a sticker showing the unit's charge, then you have to figure the lines and the coils in the furnace.
An ICP 3 ton air conditioning unit holds between 3 and 6 pounds of refrigerant. The exact amount varies based on the size of the system and the length of tubing used.
100 pounds
60000000000000 pounds
Depending upon the company who made the mini trampoline, it can hold between 250-300 pounds(150 KiloGrams or more) . Most trampolines hold more than 250 pounds.
A 1990 Cadillac Deville air conditioner should hold 46 oz. R12 Freon. This should be verified through the owners vehicle manual.
2.50 pounds of freon.......
Yes.
depemds on the car as how much freon it will hold. some cars have a tag saying how much freon the car is filled with. Too much freon is just as bad as not enough freon.
1.5 lb of Freon or about 2 an 1/2 12 oz cans.
1.8 pounds
There`s a hole somewhere, if not the lines then it`s in the equipment.
1.75 lbs. of refrigerant
This A/C sysytem holds 2 pounds of 134A
This is not an answerable question. The correct amount of freon is set during the initial set up by the installer and is dependent on the length and routing of the lines.
if the a/c is empty it can hold 1.9 to 2.1 pounds of freon
it depends on the size of the system, this info is usually on the name tag, where you'll also find model and serial numbers.