suction line liquid line
There are copper fittings that will connect to galvanized.
YOU thread or braze copper pipe Copper tubling you solder, braze, flaire, compression ring, mechincal joints
When I have to connect copper to lead "D" I usually solder the copper to the lead or wipe a lead joint depending on the diameter To connect copper to cast iron ,.... If there is a hub I caulk the copper directly into the CI with oakum and poured lead (molten) OR one can solder / braze a female adapter fitting and screw the copper into a CI female fitting
Sweat a female fitting on the copper or use a compression coupling between the two.
You can often find a modern connector such as Sharkbite or Qwest fitting to do this.
Copper
There are copper fittings that will connect to galvanized.
copper tubing
Do you perhaps mean the 'lineset'? If so, it is usually a copper line (actually 2 copper lines) running counter-currently. They connect the indoor evaporator coil (above furnace or air-handler) to the outdoor condenser. One tubing carries the refrigerant gas from the indoor evaporator coil to the outdoor condenser and the other line carries the condensed (liquid) form of this gas back to the evaporator coil for it to be evaporated again and be converted back to gas. This is the refrigeration cycle of an A/C unit.
A covalent bond. or just hit it
Nothing. It is water and it's supposed to do that.
Copper is an excellent conductor of electricity.
A still consists of a boiling chamber connected to copper tubing at the top. The tubing runs into a condensing chamber. The boiling chamber should be sealed s so that the only way out for the steam is through the condensing tube.
Yeah you can
YOU thread or braze copper pipe Copper tubling you solder, braze, flaire, compression ring, mechincal joints
In a split system air conditioner the evaporator coil, which is right next to the furnace blower is connected to the outside "condenser coil" by two copper lines called a "line-set. The larger of the two carries the refrigerant in its vapor state and the smaller of the two carries freon in a condensed or liquefied state. The brazing of copper line sets is done by means of an extreme high temp oxy/acetylene welding torch and is a much more involved and complicated process than water pipe (copper) brazing. As much as I hate to say it, "don't try this at home!
Sure why not