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R134A, R22A, R404A, R410A and many more
Depends who you purchase it from and in what quantity.
The pressure of R-410A is significantly higher than other refrigerants R-22 and R-404A. This does not mean that R-410A, or equipment containing R-410A is unsafe. It does mean that technicians must use AC equipment; cylinders and service tools have been re-engineered to handle these higher pressures.
No
your head pressure will rise through the roof maybe pushing 800+psi on the high side, and will most likely burn out the compressor in a matter of seconds
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No
No r404a is not compatible with r409a, r134a and 404a use the same lubricates and are compatible but r409a use a different lub making them incompatible
No. There'll still be residual traces of R22, even if the cylinder is empty, and it won't blend with the R404A. Furthermore, the R22 cylinder will be labeled as such, and it's actually a crime to have such cylinders improperly labeled.
Someone please correct me if I am wrong, but ZP is in relation to the thermal expansion valve. This valve limits pressure and flow through the evaporator. Sporlan uses SZ and SZP to designate the thermostatic charge and is related to refrigerant r404a. Can anyone explain what the S is in relation to?
there are many types of freon. cfc's fcfc's etc.
it depends on the gas you are using. for ex\mple r134a and r22 you charge vapour through the low side and some gases are liquis charge only r404a r409 r407c and others these you charge carefully and slowly as liquid through the low side.