R12 and R134a are two different types of chemicals used in vehicle refrigeration systems. If you mix the two together, you can corrode the system and cause major damage.
It is absolutly the same r134a Is r134a no matter how u look at it. But be careful the stopleaks and oring conditioner in the small. Over the counter cans cam be harmful to refrigeration equipment other than cars it's the additives in the refrigerant not that specify it's use I have used the smaller cans in a pinch to fix small refrigeration equipment but I buy the can that is free of the automotive additives(ussually the cheapest one on the shelf) unless I'm using it in a car
easy being an open drive unit use ester rl 68 oil for r134a refrigerant or es32 mineral oil for r12 refrigerant.
You can do one of two things, one take it to an A/C specialist but that would cost a lot money. Or, you can change the accumulator and the orfice tube and evacuate the total system and retro fit the fittings and charge the system with R134a. Either way you will be out of a little change.
Can you mix r134a with r410a?
I fix Coke coolers and vendors usually r134a and r 12 134a is 20 pressure and 12 14 to 16 alot easier to add with scale after pulling a vacuum
Tonne of refrigeration(TR) is the practical unit of refrigeration effect.Tonne of refrigeration(TR) is defined
No, unless the a/c has been converted to r134a
R134a.
Chevy switched from R12 to R134a for the model year 1994. Your truck should be R134a.
newer vehicles, such as a 99 jeep, all use 134-A refrigerant.
The 134a plus just has PAG oil added already, so that you (theoretically) don't have to add it after adding the R134a.