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Nylog or Not

PWC Repair

Well-known member
Joined
Dec 27, 2012
Messages
3,166
Location
Arkansas
Yes. Actually, Stay-Brite #8 is a VERY good alloy. And if you learn to use it properly (very clean copper) you probably won't go back. It only requires 1/2 the heat to get it to flow. It is STILL suggested to purge on any refrigerant type system with nitrogen.....period! In fact, the mechanical engineer at the local regional hospital won't let anybody work on a refrigerant system without purging and using the Stay-Brite #8. They don't use silver solder on any of their stuff anymore. This includes VERY large systems with 2 3/8 copper lines! I would know,....I sold them the copper! There is another local contractor that uses a product called Bridgit. We started stocking it just for him. It seems very similar to the Stay Brite stuff.
 
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mrobins297aaa

Well-known member
Joined
Sep 20, 2010
Messages
3,283
Location
south east michigan
I'll just add my two cents about stay-brite#8.

I've had about the same experience as Jim greengo has had with it. I've used it for over 30 years on hundreds of R-22 system installs and in all that time I've never had a joint come a part or even a leak that I can remember.

it's just as easy as water pipe soldering, i just used a regular propane tank, you don't need mapp gas, it just doesn't need to be that hot.

I've been in those classes with the factory rep's at the wholesale house and I remember one about 30 years ago when the rep had in his hand those same examples of soldering verses brazing and the oxide scale with brazing and no scale with soldering, then he said "Gentlemen this is the stuff you should be using" he was holding stay-brite#8 in his other hand. that was enough for me.

It's amazing stuff with harris's stay clean liquid flux you can solder copper to steel, when I replaced the compressor in my beverage cooler 3 years ago I had to do just that it has a steel tubed condenser. (r134a).

I'm going to add my disclaimer here, before I get flamed, all my experiences with #8 have been with r22. I've been retired for 13 years and have not done any 410a systems.

Also i know the manufacturers all recommend brazing with nitrogen purge for 410a that being said I can't believe that #8 wouldn't hold up to the increased pressures of 410a.
maybe there's another reason? I thought I heard something about the flux being a problem. I do know there are still people out there still using it on 410a installs.
According to Harris the manufacturer it's stronger than a brazed joint.

I just wonder why were going back to all these line sets from the 70's that were nothing but problems, flared connections and pre-charged line sets.

it just seems like were going backwards, just my two cents.
 

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