Should have let the liquid refrigerant pass into the recovery tank before turning the recovery machine on. He talked about it but had the input port closed off at first.
Jamie, he contaminated the refrigerant by not bleeding the hoses when he hooked them up and then pumped all the air into the recovery tank. Any new tank should be in a vacuum so you will Not always have refrigerant in the tank. You should evacuate a new tank yourself because some ship with dry nitrogen in them. I can go on and on with what’s wrong with this video but like some others say just forget you ever see this video and hopefully it will get deleted. In summary Jamie please watch and learn from competent people. This video would be more suited to be an SNL skit for the HVAC trade. And please study and get your own EPA 608 card!
1. Bleed your hoses (like everyone else said) 2. You never go into vacuum when recovering - you chance recovering contaminants, moisture, etc. 3. OMG - is this Trump University?
waw bro where is your scale At? how are you going to know how much refrigerant you put in the Tank? delete this video try to do another one PLZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
Minus vacuum? Wouldn't that mean pressurized? Lol. Great video, but previous poster was right, use the right terminology. Minus four, how about four inches of vacuum.
Omg. Thats what you should NOT do. Forget this and go learn from somewhere else. What ever you do in life, you have to understand what you do and WHY you are doing it instead of following steps like an idiot.
Good demonstration. Could this machine use to service automobiles? And do I follow the same precidure as what was just shown?
The recovery tank isn't always going to have refrigerant in if its a new tank it will be empty and under vacuum
Should have let the liquid refrigerant pass into the recovery tank before turning the recovery machine on. He talked about it but had the input port closed off at first.
I"M SO CONFUSED!
Need to bleed the lines, you just contaminated your refrigerant you are trying to recover.
Can u mix r22 with 427a
NO you should always try to avoid mixing refrigerants.
Bill Ledford absolutely not
Or adding a filter dryer will be fine as well.
@@alexdemartine4758 that only removes contaminants not air. Don't want to put air in your recovery tank.
2:07 What are you drinking my water!?? Common man...
hahahah
these people are techs? our industry is doomed!!!
hahahahah
Good demonstration 👍🏽
you have to bleed your lines dude before and after recovery you have contaminated your refrigerant...
Does compressor oil come out during recovery?
nice. actually quite a good overview
He contaminated the refrigerant. That's a fail...except that he's the teacher. Talk about complicating a simple process.
Can you explain how he contaminated the refridgerant as im learning thanks in advance. ?......jamie
Jamie, he contaminated the refrigerant by not bleeding the hoses when he hooked them up and then pumped all the air into the recovery tank. Any new tank should be in a vacuum so you will Not always have refrigerant in the tank. You should evacuate a new tank yourself because some ship with dry nitrogen in them.
I can go on and on with what’s wrong with this video but like some others say just forget you ever see this video and hopefully it will get deleted.
In summary Jamie please watch and learn from competent people. This video would be more suited to be an SNL skit for the HVAC trade. And please study and get your own EPA 608 card!
1. Bleed your hoses (like everyone else said)
2. You never go into vacuum when recovering - you chance recovering contaminants, moisture, etc.
3. OMG - is this Trump University?
Biden University actually
Definitely Biden university LOL
Sounds like a special class lol
waw bro where is your scale At? how are you going to know how much refrigerant you put in the Tank? delete this video try to do another one PLZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZZ
Using a scale is the next video...? And for some who starts out with "Safety first", shouldn't he be wearing gloves? At least for his students sake?
Ok question if your system had air this process doesn't remove and separate the air from the Freon does it?
What school is this?
Minus vacuum? Wouldn't that mean pressurized? Lol. Great video, but previous poster was right, use the right terminology. Minus four, how about four inches of vacuum.
Im taking this for finals again tomorrow and eim stuck at charging after I recover
Where is mighty mouse to the rescue
how do i get full recovery of my refrigrant
do i need to bleed the system before i recover?
good god almighty
What do you do with a virgin recovery tank? Plz answer
Put the tank into a vacuum with your vacuum pump.
You pop its cherry.
Quite confusing even when you know the process. Just a bad presentation that needed more preparation.
Ur crazy dude
very nice thank you for sharing!!!!!!!
Cool
Omg. Thats what you should NOT do. Forget this and go learn from somewhere else. What ever you do in life, you have to understand what you do and WHY you are doing it instead of following steps like an idiot.
A little confusing.
RSI is a good schooling keep dreaming ese.
can't read the gauges ... this is total crap!
Ac suit dawn fanction
Im taking this for finals again tomorrow and eim stuck at charging after I recover