[AT] R134a
Mark Johnson
markjohnson100 at centurylink.net
Mon Jan 14 06:46:37 PST 2019
One must hope that the standards for allowable leakage from an A/C
system are as tight as for fuel systems...as I recall, the old R-12
systems usually had 2-3 lbs of refrigerant. A couple pounds of propane
would make a pretty good fuel-air bomb, worst case...or an underhood
blowtorch with a broken line spraying. Neither are my idea of a good
time - and, unlike gasoline, diesel, or alcohol, a Freon-compatible
refrigerant is self-propelling. Of course, the same is true of a gaseous
fuel, whether natural gas, hydrogen, or propane.
Not sure about disposing of gasoline...if you live in an area that has a
'household hazardous waste' collection point, they might take it a
gallon or so at a time. I wouldn't bet that they'd want 10+ gallons in
one whack, though. 5 year old gasoline might be ok to burn in a tractor
or truck, especially if diluted. Is that a 'gas tank full' like a 100
gallon farm gas barrel, or a full tank of gas in the old Case?
I've never had any trouble disposing of anything at a household waste
collection - old solvents, aged paint, dead fluorescent lights,
including those I *knew* contained mercury; they've always taken
everything. I think they do draw the line at low-level radioactive
waste, but the only bits of that I've ever had have been in microcurie
amounts in old smoke detectors.
Mark J
On 1/14/2019 8:15 AM, Ken Knierim wrote:
> How much more flammable than fuel are these refrigerants? Vehicles are
> fueled by propane, gasoline, alcohol, natural gas, batteries and in
> some cases, hydrogen. Seems that stored energy is there regardless...
> and from my meager understanding, there isn't a whole lot of flammable
> material in the A/C systems when using these types of refrigerants.
>
> One other thing, probably more useful to me... what's the safe method
> of disposing this newer gasoline when it goes bad? I've got a gas tank
> full of 5+ year old gas that I need to find a home for. I can't burn
> that much in my old Case tractors because I don't run them very much
> anymore.
>
> Thanks,
>
> Ken in AZ
>
> On Sun, Jan 13, 2019 at 6:58 PM Steve W. <swilliams268 at frontier.com
> <mailto:swilliams268 at frontier.com>> wrote:
>
> Mark Johnson wrote:
> > There is one problem with Red Tek 12A - which you already touched
> > on...flammability. The propane+n-isobutane mix has been known
> for a good
> > many years - it has all the same useful properties as R-12 - almost
> > identical eutectic curve, carries oil through the system, and so
> on. My
> > dad (a 1950 engineering graduate) apparently took a 'practical
> > thermodynamics' course where they spent a lot of time studying
> > properties of gases that would be useful as refrigerants. Even
> as early
> > as the late 1940's, hydrocarbon gases like propane were known to be
> > useful - but the available gasket and seal technology meant that
> they
> > were too hazardous to use in commercial environments. [As an
> engineer,
> > Pop was responsible for maintaining the chiller systems for milk
> and ice
> > cream production at a dairy plant, from about 1952 to 1963.]
> Propane
> > might have been better than ammonia, even then - but small
> ammonia leaks
> > are easily detectable, and the stuff doesn't explode!
> >
> > I can remember when those 14 oz cans of R-12 were 59 cents at
> > K-Mart...the stuff was cheaper than bottled water. Anybody who
> could
> > read a gauge set and turn a wrench could recharge their own A/C
> - which
> > no doubt contributed to the 'escape' problem, as it was cheaper to
> > recharge the system once a month than to go get it fixed.
> >
> > Mark J
>
> That's why it is illegal to use. The guy who was pushing the stuff
> back
> then managed to blow himself up while demonstrating how "safe" the
> stuff
> was..
>
>
> --
> Steve W.
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