wrench409
Well-known member
Can dye's be used to track down my home HVAC unit yearly loss (1 ~ 1.5 lbs)?
Are schrader valves for auto use the same for HVAC use?
Are schrader valves for auto use the same for HVAC use?
So stay away from dye.A pound a YEAR isn't all that big a leak, and if its in the wrong place, you won't see the dye... I would second getting a leak detector (**NOT** a flame detector if you're in your attic!) and find it that way.
My guess is it's a bad junction / union / schrader valve / compressor seal. And while yes, they're the same valve, you need to remove your refrigerant to replace it, then evacuate the system to then recharge it... unless you have all the equipment from Manifold gauges to the R22 capture system to the vacuum pump (and IIRC you can't vent R22, you have to recapture it) once you find the leak you may want to then call someone out to do the repair.
Just my 2 cents...

I normally start with loose shrader valves,a simple valve core tool is a priceless item in this business.
If its not a shrader valve I normally will pump the Freon back into the condenser then pressurize the rest of the system with around 300lbs of nitrogen and start listening,youll here the leak.![]()

Make sure you check the caps on the service valves, they can leak slowly when cold or hot and not show up when the system is off and pressure is equal. Would not hurt to put some Teflon pipe dope on these threads. I am not talking about the schrader valves but the service valves for isolating the system. When operating the high side is very hot and the cold side is almost to freezing temp. There is a lot of metal expansion when these temps change.

Would not hurt to put some Teflon pipe dope on these threads.
All the pipe dope in the world won't seal machine threads. Ever...
Tommy


I worked on a heat pump this morning,I think it was a tappan.
Anyway the guy had some guy come out last year who told him his A coil was bad so he changed it and recharged system,a couple of weeks later it was low again and he wanted to try changing some parts,Homeowner got smart and ran him off.
Anyway today he calls me up to look at it and sure as **** as soon as I walk up to the units behind the house neither was running so I walked in and kicked on the main floor stat to kick that unit on.
Then I walked back outside and threw the gauges on the unit that wasn't running and found it was bone dry.
The clown had slopped a bunch of goop on the threads of the service valve caps before screwing them on,but he had the valves seated all the way against the fittings instead of 1/8" down from seated.
so I cranked them down 1/8' put the caps back on and snugged them up really good and dumped the nitrogen in and let it sit for an hr before vacuuming it down and recharging it.
Why does it seem like these installers that want to moonlight on craigslist always go right to selling somebody an A coil rather than using common sense to try and troubleshoot things first?![]()
