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Freon Recovery

2mJps

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I have wondered if a frig compresser could be used to recover the freon from cars or central air unites then would it be ok to reuse? Would it need to be or could it be filtered?
 
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kd3pc

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Northern Neck
I have wondered if a frig compresser could be used to recover the freon from cars or central air unites then would it be ok to reuse? Would it need to be or could it be filtered?

highly regulated by the government, and those rules and fines will make it very tough to build a DIY recovery unit. Anyone licensed to repair/recover is obligated to identify bad equipment, etc.

as another poster commented different refrigerants and processes for each of those.
 

brewchief

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Michigan
There used to be guide lines from the epa for home built recovery units, not sure if they are still around or if home built units were phased out.
 

rsanter

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visalia ca
Short answer is yes...
A friend did it many years ago.
He used it as a vac pump to evacuate AC systems on cars and what was pulled out was pumped into an old freon tank.
He was able to get a hold of some filters that were used in the recovery systems as service replacements and he would run from the dirty tank, through the filter and into a ' clean ' tank.
Then he would use the clean stuff in people's cars.

Now, he was a mobile repair small buisness and a bit if a share tree guy. Most of his work was good but some I questioned.
I don't think the freon was as clean as the whole pro system makes it but it was better than nothing.
He enclosed the pump and stuff in a box he painted so it did not look like a complete hack job

Bob
 

walrus

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Maine
Has to meet EPA specs, fines are huge if caught violating. A recovery unit isn't that expensive but you have to have a license
 

Champ128

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May 3, 2015
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It is against EPA regulations to use recovered refrigerant in any system other than the one it came from without it being recycled by a liscened recycler. If any water vapor had been into the system or if a compressed had burnout it could quickly destroy another system. There would be no way for you to efficiently remove the water vapor.
 
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2

2mJps

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north central Mo
Thanks Guys if i was to ever do this it would be on my own stuff and i wouldnt reuse it if there was something that went wrong.
 
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crabjoe

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Ceciltucky, MD
It is against EPA regulations to use recovered refrigerant in any system other than the one it came from without it being recycled by a liscened recycler.

From what I remember, it's either back into the same system or it can be used in a different system owned by the same owner.
 

LS6 Tommy

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From what I remember, it's either back into the same system or it can be used in a different system owned by the same owner.

Only of you start with an evacuated recovery cylinder or of all of the refrigerant in the cylinder is the same type and from the same owner. If any other refrigerant is in there it must be recycled.

Tommy
 

walrus

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Only of you start with an evacuated recovery cylinder or of all of the refrigerant in the cylinder is the same type and from the same owner. If any other refrigerant is in there it must be recycled.

Tommy

You aren't supposed to mix types of refrigerant anyway, makes the recovered refrigerant useless and generally it has to be destroyed
 

LS6 Tommy

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You aren't supposed to mix types of refrigerant anyway, makes the recovered refrigerant useless and generally it has to be destroyed

My point wasn't about mixing refrigerants, it was that the tech can only reuse the recovered refrigerant on the OP's unit if he started with an empty cylinder or if it was all the same type of known good refrigerant from the same owner.

Tommy
 
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