I suppose there's about 240g of Hychill for the specified 600g of r134a?
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The message was that 600g was used, but perhaps the equivalent weight of hychill.
It was stated that there are no leaks.
Fingers crossed it's a blocked dryer and they didn't put in 600g of Hychill.
I'll get that checked.
Edit: Would overfilling with Hychill cause damage?
The mechaninc used the Hychill specs for the 3.0 D4 which is 600g R134A or 180g of Minus 30.
It would send the Head Pressure sky high.If the HP cut out is operating it should stop any damage,but better not to operate it at all,as cycling on the HP switch,and operating at very high head pressures is not ideal.
They are often set very high on Auto air systems,often just over 400PSI,which seems rediculously high for 134A/Hychill,but the settings seem the norm on many different brands of vehicles.
FWIW,our newer Hi Aces and Hi Luxs ACs operate on R1234YF
Then again your commercial refrigeration condenser will be in open air with the fan going flat out, not sitting up the arse of a diesel bus on a 42C day at the lights with the viscous fan doing less than 1000rpm.
I've seen > 26bar (~380PSI) sitting at the lights. Usually the evap temperature will start to climb so I'll lean on the throttle a bit to get the fan & compressor revs up. Happy to trade fuel for comfort.
Correct,but condenser coils on our gear get filthy at times,often with a big mat of dirt across them.
Usually found at sites where those customers think servicing is a waste of money.
Oh well,good luck to them,its the old story with anything mechanical,look after it and it will look after you.[smilebigeye]