Did you know these epa cocksuckers are mandating that all refrigerant used will be pure propane. They are removing the flame retardant from the R410 azeotropic blend they are using now because the flame retardant component does not add to the refrigeration efficiency. To counter the risks they're putting electronic propane detection systems and cut offs into all new systems. This has the potential to add thousands to the cost of a new system. A system leak has the potential to be catastrophic. BRING BACK R22!
Propane is an excellent refrigerant. I'm surprised that they would promote that. And you don't need an HVAC license to buy it. Many homes already have propane to run their stoves, water heaters, and furnaces. What's so dangerous about using it as a refrigerant? The smoking HVAC guy that connects up to the system deserves the Darwin award.
It is an excellent Refrigerant for small appliances. Those systems hold a few ounces of refrigerant. The average household heating and air system can hold sometimes 10, sometimes 17 pounds of refrigerant. Mainly my concern is leaking evaporator coils sitting on top of furnaces that have open air combustion chambers. it will not be code to install them that way, but you know some shade tree mechanic will.
Did you know these epa cocksuckers are mandating that all refrigerant used will be pure propane. They are removing the flame retardant from the R410 azeotropic blend they are using now because the flame retardant component does not add to the refrigeration efficiency. To counter the risks they're putting electronic propane detection systems and cut offs into all new systems. This has the potential to add thousands to the cost of a new system. A system leak has the potential to be catastrophic. BRING BACK R22!
Propane is an excellent refrigerant. I'm surprised that they would promote that. And you don't need an HVAC license to buy it. Many homes already have propane to run their stoves, water heaters, and furnaces. What's so dangerous about using it as a refrigerant? The smoking HVAC guy that connects up to the system deserves the Darwin award.
It is an excellent Refrigerant for small appliances. Those systems hold a few ounces of refrigerant. The average household heating and air system can hold sometimes 10, sometimes 17 pounds of refrigerant. Mainly my concern is leaking evaporator coils sitting on top of furnaces that have open air combustion chambers. it will not be code to install them that way, but you know some shade tree mechanic will.
Reverse engineer R22 and call it Q17.
Make R -12 Great Again................The Ozone Hole was as big as The Covid Mask Holes.
When the patent ended the Ozone Hole grew dramatically. Coincidence?