Ah, yes, forgot about the packaging on thoseI would be a little reluctant to reuse it, after all, it is twenty years old.
You said gas pack? I assume it is a self contained residential packaged unit? With a package unit you don't have to recover and refrigerant to move it, so there is some thought that you will not have a whole lot of work into it.
And worth basically nothing reused. No good pro is putting old r22 in a customer's equipment.You can probably sell the r22 and scrap the rest. That refrigerant it super expensive now.
Used R22 is probably worth $5 a pound. It is illegal to use it in someone else's equipment. It will cost more to recover than it is worth.You can probably sell the r22 and scrap the rest. That refrigerant it super expensive now.
I thought it was worth more but I guess I’m wrong! I remember it wasn’t cheap getting out old system recharged after a leak.Used R22 is probably worth $5 a pound. It is illegal to use it in someone else's equipment. It will cost more to recover than it is worth.
New stuff is very expensive, no question there.I thought it was worth more but I guess I’m wrong! I remember it wasn’t cheap getting out old system recharged after a leak.
This. People just don't read.I would be a little reluctant to reuse it, after all, it is twenty years old.
You said gas pack? I assume it is a self contained residential packaged unit? With a package unit you don't have to recover and refrigerant to move it, so there is some thought that you will not have a whole lot of work into it.
if you cant use it to refill, who will pay $5?Used R22 is probably worth $5 a pound. It is illegal to use it in someone else's equipment. It will cost more to recover than it is worth.
A package unit is self contained, just pick it up and set it down somewhere new, just need to wire and duct t.20 years old must be r22, right? Do you own the equipment to capture the refrigerant? Can't imagine you will find a pro to do that and recharge the unit.
Yeah, they aren't something I had ever seen used in New England, so I wasn't thinking about that when posting.A package unit is self contained, just pick it up and set it down somewhere new, just need to wire and duct t.
*edit, I see this has already been covered
It can be recycled.if you cant use it to refill, who will pay $5?
What terms do you use to find someone who will do residential capture, if there even is such a niche? I have a system I want to remove as part of a DIY remodeling to make way for a mini-split. I can't find anyone to do it on a small scale, only commercial. I assume your common service guy or company just vents it, which I would like to avoid. I'm fine with paying for the service.It can be recycled.
I worked for a HVAC wholesaler and we bought and sold it to a company that cleaned it and repackaged it for resale.
The guys that just replaced two of my r22 systems captured it. They pay for recycling when they have full bottlesWhat terms do you use to find someone who will do residential capture, if there even is such a niche? I have a system I want to remove as part of a DIY remodeling to make way for a mini-split. I can't find anyone to do it on a small scale, only commercial. I assume your common service guy or company just vents it, which I would like to avoid.
Change your assumption.I assume your common service guy or company just vents it, which I would like to avoid. I'm fine with paying for the service.
Some guys will, but it is against the law to vent most refrigerant, fines up to $45,000 per day. Sad thing is I have never heard of a contractor getting fined, but some manufacturing plants have, so it appears there is not much policing going on.I assume your common service guy or company just vents it, which I would like to avoid. I'm fine with paying for the service.
My point exactly, the reason for the post. The culture around here is "Do what you can get away with."Some guys will, but it is against the law to vent most refrigerant, fines up to $45,000 per day. Sad thing is I have never heard of a contractor getting fined, but some manufacturing plants have, so it appears there is not much policing going on.
