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Posted by HVACstudent on March 30, 2008, 8:42 pm
settle a discussion for me, at issue is the total r410a refrigerant capacity in
a
typical minisplit system, ie. mitsubishi, sanyo, fujitsu etc.
I claim a typical 1 ton or smaller system contains about 2 pounds of r410a
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Posted by on March 30, 2008, 8:58 pm
On Mon, 31 Mar 2008 03:42:27 +0300, "HVACstudent"
>settle a discussion for me, at issue is the total r410a refrigerant capacity in
a
>typical minisplit system, ie. mitsubishi, sanyo, fujitsu etc.
>I claim a typical 1 ton or smaller system contains about 2 pounds of r410a
Do your own homework fuckwit.
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Posted by Noon-Air on March 30, 2008, 9:37 pm
> settle a discussion for me, at issue is the total r410a refrigerant
> capacity in a typical minisplit system, ie. mitsubishi, sanyo, fujitsu
> etc.
> I claim a typical 1 ton or smaller system contains about 2 pounds of r410a
You can "claim" what you want, but before you do, you might want to compare
the refrigerant charges in identical systems with the same capacities in
both R-22 and R-410a, then work out an average.
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Posted by Stormin Mormon on March 30, 2008, 9:44 pm
Call your local parts house, and ask. They ought to have that info. Or, do
an internet search. This is called "research", something that used to be
taught in schools.
--
Christopher A. Young
Learn more about Jesus
www.lds.org
.
settle a discussion for me, at issue is the total r410a refrigerant capacity
in a
typical minisplit system, ie. mitsubishi, sanyo, fujitsu etc.
I claim a typical 1 ton or smaller system contains about 2 pounds of r410a
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Posted by Zyp on April 3, 2008, 1:32 am
HVACstudent wrote:
> settle a discussion for me, at issue is the total r410a refrigerant
> capacity in a typical minisplit system, ie. mitsubishi, sanyo,
> fujitsu etc.
> I claim a typical 1 ton or smaller system contains about 2 pounds of
> r410a
It depends on the btu /lb. within the system and how many pounds per minute
you cycle, which depends on the compressor displacement. Different
manufacture's might use different compressors for identical capacity's which
then may require different amounts. If it's a VFD type compressor, then it
may have a receiver, which may hold some excess refrigerant over and above
what a standard non-VFD might.
I'm not sure what you mean by typical - Mitsubishi, Sanyo Fujitsu, or
solues. [Ok - I added the last one.]
--
Zyp
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