Syamand seaman, you know good old seamen.seamem
Regular old green.
134
Its too old and you'd most likely have to take it to a mechanic to have them drain the old freon, which is illegal to drain yourself due to bad fumes for the atmosphere and they'll replace it with I believe RA12 or something of the sort. If the pump/hose is bad they'll have to replace that too to ensure no problems with the new freon. I'm actually about to do it on my '87 Calais here very soon.
Assuming it is the same type of "freon", yes. The freon would be removed from the old system with a recovory/recycling machine.Assuming it is the same type of "freon", yes. The freon would be removed from the old system with a recovory/recycling machine.
Look on the outdoor compressor, there should be a sticker that tells you what kind of refrigerant it uses. If it says r22, it is the old type.
it will tell you the free on type on the compressor. it will be r-12, r-14 or 134a. it really doesn't matter if you are going to change the freon. if you pull out all the old freon and re-fill it with 134a it will still work. 134a is the only one you can buy over the counter.
Remove the 1995 Oldsmobile Cutlass intake manifold retaining bolts. The manifold will come off. Remove the old gasket. Clean the surface. Put the new intake gasket and tighten the intake manifold retaining bolts.
A machine that reclaims Freon is needed to remove the old Freon. The system will then need to have a vacuum pulled, and then the new Freon can be added.
Remove freon via EPA mandated instructions Remove drive belt from engine pully Remove AC hoses from rear connections of compressor Remove compressor mounting bolts
It's almost impossible to get the old stuff now, so you it doesn't realy matter. You'll need to use 134A in your AC system.
Check NADA old cars