Have never seen them ship installed or in a kit with new equipment.
My friedrich DIY mini split came with that pink locking cap, I guess there is no reason to mess with the charge under normal circumstances.
EPA is clear as mud on a lot of things but they now imply that r410a needs 608 certification: https://www.epa.gov/section608/section-608-technician-certification
I agree, but yesterday one of our techs stopped by the auto parts store that we use at work to pick up a can of 134a with dye in it . He said that he was "carded". They said that after January 2018, they are required to check for certification.
Additionally, our parts department received a notice from our motorcraft supplier stating that they need 1 certification on file to supply us with 134a.
You can also buy R22 from amazon. I checked yesterday and added it to my basket to see if it would go thru. If I did the transaction it would have been $350 with the $97 shipping since it wasn’t part of prime. This is for the large 25lb jug
Can you post a link to that? I see R22 replacements on Amazon, but no actual R22. We're still paying $600+ for 30lb of 'reclaim/recycle' R22 in GA. Unless you find old stock, there isn't any new available.
Tyson
I should have been more direct. As of 1/1/2018 it is against federal law to attach gauges to any system with freon or similar refrigerant without certification. Anyone helping the illegal activity is assisting in committing a crime. Whether someone disagrees with the law or finds it not a big deal is irrelevant.
guess I'm in trouble since I recharge both r12 r134A systems.. Then again who cares its my system and I'll do what I want
^^^^^This^^^^^
I had to get both in order to handle 410a, 404a, 452a and R22 in reefer units.
Unless you are servicing the AC for the passenger compartment of a motor vechicle, you are only required to have a 608 cert. The size & operating pressures of the equipment you service dictates whether it must be type I, II, III or Universal.
Tommy
Automotive(truck) is my primary so I had the 609 then came the reefer units................
Can we get a forum rule that says if anyone says servicing your own stuff is wrong/illegal/dumb/etc, they get a 30 day timeout? This is GJ for crying out loud, not Martha Stewart forum.
Does this apply to topping off the refrigerant in your car?
Got a link?
Section 608 of the Clean Air Act prohibits the intentional release (venting) of any refrigerant when maintaining, servicing, repairing, or disposing of air conditioning or refrigeration equipment, including MVAC systems.
Refrigerant: Must be approved by EPA and cannot be intentionally released (vented) to the environment.*
Servicing: When payment of any kind is involved (including non-monetary), any person working on an MVAC system must be certified under section 609 of the CAA and they must use approved refrigerant handling equipment.
yes. Excepting refrigerants that are considered non-environmentally damaging. There are problems even with how the refrigerant is added*, and you cannot release it to the atmosphere. Here in California the Air Board has sniffers all over the place and they can pinpoint with some certainty where chemicals are released into the air. Then they go look for the culprit. Frankly it isn't worth the savings anymore to do HVAC yourself without the proper training and tools. I just dropped off my old vacuum pump at Goodwill yesterday for that reason. A good set of modern legal tools, and the training will set you back more than the cost of a whole new AC.
*some refrigerants must remain liquid when added, and others must be added as a gas or it damages the system or causes the cooling efficiency to drop.
Also - more car systems are damaged by over topping than by being low. You can get a MOBILE EPA section 609 cert online. The EPA section 608 cert is a bit harder but it can be done in cram classes.
Here in California the Air Board has sniffers all over the place and they can pinpoint with some certainty where chemicals are released into the air. Then they go look for the culprit. Frankly it isn't worth the savings anymore to do HVAC yourself without the proper training and tools. I just dropped off my old vacuum pump at Goodwill yesterday for that reason. A good set of modern legal tools, and the training will set you back more than the cost of a whole new AC.
It may change personal use vs professionally in a work setting. The 608 test for car ac is easy to pass if needed.
No offense, I find this EXTREMELY hard to believe...
Just WHO is going to come looking to see if I passed any gas?
is HFC-134a not used in canned air in California. I always found that funny, you can buy the canned air that contain the same stuff that is in refrigerant, but you can't vent the refrigerant.
It may change personal use vs professionally in a work setting. The 608 test for car ac is easy to pass if needed.
Hell. It was an open book test when I took it in 1991!

Hell. It was an open book test when I took it in 1991!
Not the same test, as of last January the older cert(The one that used your SSN as the cert number............) is no longer valid