OP
jonathan75
Well-known member
Can I just hook up the low side and tank and ignore the high liquid side and not connect it when charging? Or is there a reason I would need to monitor the high side?
Use what is going to be easiest and correct your temperature as needed, most of the time with superheat you will have a plus/minus of 5 degrees or so anyways.
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As long as nothing was leaking from the cap, i wouldnt worry about it. The cap is there to account for small leaks on the valve. But if you want to spend the 40 bux on the tool, its a nice thing to have.
I would normally disconnect the suction side when running. It will be under a lower pressure and there will be no liquid in the line to shoot out. Suction disconnection should never be a problem. It is the easier line.
A high side low loss fitting works great. If you have the low loss fitting, all you do is disconnect the high side hose, and bleed the liquid back into the low side by opening the valves to each other. Don't forget to bleed the air out of both lines before performing this.
You could get the actual low loss fitting or a hose end with a ball valve. Either perform the same function.
As far as hooking up to your current system, just use the access ports on the condenser. Your gauges should have 1/4" standard connections. I would use the ball valve and put it on the end of the high side hose.
After you hook the hoses up, bleed the "air" from the hoses (high and low). Get your readings with an unfrozen coil. When going to disconnect, close the ball valve on the high side. Open the high side to the low side and let the refrigerant that has condensed in the high side hose back into the system. Disconnect both hoses.