r134
The amount of refrigerant in an air conditioner varies depending on the size and type of the unit. Typical residential air conditioners contain around 4-10 pounds of refrigerant. It's important to consult the manufacturer's specifications or a professional technician for accurate information on a specific unit.
Domestic refrigerators and window or through-the-wall air conditioners.
Domestic refrigerators and window or through-the-wall air conditioners.
Domestic refrigerators and window or through-the-wall air conditioners.
Domestic refrigerators and window or through-the-wall air conditioners.
If you have a split unit - one with an outdoor condensing unit and an evaporator coil built into the furnace indoors, the refrigerant type will be shown on a label or engraved metal plate attached to the condensing unit. The amount of refrigerant will vary, depending on the diameter and length of pipe connecting the two units. Most window air conditioners have an hermetically sealed refrigerant loop and cannot be recharged in the field, although they may also list the refrigerant type on a data plate somewhere.
The most common refrigerant used in refrigerators is R-134a.
mechanical, electrical, sound, thermal, chemical, light, solar, and nuclear
Most refrigerators use a capillary tube as the refrigerant metering device. It is a simple and cost-effective way to regulate the flow of refrigerant into the evaporator coil.
The types are: ammonia, sulfur dioxide, hydrocarbons like methane, methyl chloride, and methylene chloride, the freon and genetron and the water. The ammonia is the worst because can kill you, is the most toxic, the sulfur dioxide is corrosive and can injure plants but not to you, only is you breath it for a time, the hydrocarbons are not toxic like freon and genetron, and the water that is other refrigerant but is innocuous.
The type of refrigerant that an E 34 needs is R12 refrigerant. It is absolutely necessary that you do not put any other type of refrigerant into a R12.
Refrigerant compatibility refers to different types of refrigerant being compatible. Not all air conditioners use the same type of refrigerant and not all refrigerants are compatible in every air conditioner.