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Thread: One for the fridgies

  1. #311
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    Quote Originally Posted by 4bee View Post
    Eeeerrrrrr BTW did I ever tell you about....... Nah, not for this forum. Maybe another time.
    So you got a call out to the local nudist colony as well?

    That is one of many stories i got,but we will leave it for another day

    They didn't even tell me what the place was when they logged the call.

    Its got a big 62 painted on a 44 gallon drum,just drive down the dirt track,the lady said that rang.We pay cash,come to the shop.

    It was years ago but i remember it like it was yesterday...

    The council has since shut it down

  2. #312
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    Bwahahahaha
    So where did you hang your tool bag, Paul? One for the fridgiesOne for the fridgiesOne for the fridgiesOne for the fridgies

  3. #313
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    That is a good question Rick, so c'mon Paul make with the answer. I'm all agog.


    In reality if one is surrounded by nature, tool bag hooks are probably the last thing on one's mind, even a Gum tree branch or a fence post would do.

  4. #314
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    Asian house gecko fries nursing home's air-conditioning unit amid vermin invasion - ABC News (Australian Broadcasting Corporation)

    Seems like mothballs don't work and as they are considered vermin, insurers won't pay, pro'ly as A/c's should be vermin-proofed?
    2005 D3 TDV6 Present
    1999 D2 TD5 Gone

  5. #315
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    Maybe the Cane Toads could eat them?


    A couple of KG of C4 tied to a micro sensor in the control box should be a permanent solution as well.
    Certainly good for repeat business for the local contractor once the cops had left the Crime Scene & once he'd cleared up the rubble & had something to connect to.

  6. #316
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    This bloke took out three boards for the AC that services the entire first floor in a government building in Murwillumbah last week.
    I don't know what other damage he/she's created yet.

    Rats, mice, frogs, snakes, cats (on dairies) create havoc in fridge and AC systems...

  7. #317
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    Want a Sun tan like that? Go north young man to north NSW or SEQ.

  8. #318
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    More air conditioning pain on the horizon

    Only fridgies would know, but we're in for yet another - "enviromentally" driven change of air conditioning gas, and this one ain't cheap....

    Actually, it's been in the making for nearly 9 years, and the end draweth nigh in a year or two.

    Found this when I was looking up BANG -Gas automotive drop-ins.... from a forum dedicated to the subject / Techies.

    Goodbye R134a, hello 1234yf

    Oh, forgot to mention, factories built in Good 'Ole US of A..and China. Price is lots more than 134a.


    Changing to another formulation is not restricted to A/C gasses, it's almost an 'American Business Model', as Type 1 Diabetics would know. - Only a couple of insulin makers in the world, and, oddly enough, they raise their prices in lockstep. Not only but also, they constantly alter (new patent....) the formulas to keep out generic manufacturers.

    Personally, I don't care what gas goes into the bus I drive, only that it works in our currently hot weather of 40+ degrees over here. The 134a in my roof-top unit is not doing too well. (But great in winter, and spring, and autumn!) 29 degrees is still too warm even if it is 40 outside.

  9. #319
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    Quote Originally Posted by superquag View Post
    Only fridgies would know, but we're in for yet another - "enviromentally" driven change of air conditioning gas, and this one ain't cheap....

    Actually, it's been in the making for nearly 9 years, and the end draweth nigh in a year or two.

    Found this when I was looking up BANG -Gas automotive drop-ins.... from a forum dedicated to the subject / Techies.

    Goodbye R134a, hello 1234yf

    Oh, forgot to mention, factories built in Good 'Ole US of A..and China. Price is lots more than 134a.


    Changing to another formulation is not restricted to A/C gasses, it's almost an 'American Business Model', as Type 1 Diabetics would know. - Only a couple of insulin makers in the world, and, oddly enough, they raise their prices in lockstep. Not only but also, they constantly alter (new patent....) the formulas to keep out generic manufacturers.

    Personally, I don't care what gas goes into the bus I drive, only that it works in our currently hot weather of 40+ degrees over here. The 134a in my roof-top unit is not doing too well. (But great in winter, and spring, and autumn!) 29 degrees is still too warm even if it is 40 outside.
    Load of garbage,that was dated 2011.

    R134a is readily available,used by the majority of vehicle manufacturers,and has hardly risen in price since 2011.No more than any of the commonly used refrigerants anyway.
    It is still the OEM refrigerant used in many refrigeration systems.

    1234yf was actually banned by some auto manufacturers for various reasons,particularly Mercedes.

  10. #320
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    Yep, most modern supermarket racks are R134a/CO2 cascade systems.

    A basic top up of a rack is 50-60kg.
    Total charge can be up to 600kg.
    It isn't going away very soon.

    The latest tech is a transcritical CO2 system, but you can count the numbers on both hands and feet on the entire east coast atm.
    Funnily enough the apprentice and I have just left a new store using it.

    The pressures are insane.
    90bar/1300psi on the high side, and CO2 TC has some interesting quirks for those of us used to vapour compression systems.

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