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Showing posts with label Phoenix Recharge A/C. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Phoenix Recharge A/C. Show all posts

Thursday, December 29, 2016

Phoenix Recharge A/C Thoughts For the DIY Enthusiasts

Phoenix Recharge A/C
Phoenix Recharge A/C
Doing a Phoenix recharge A/C seems like a common piece of HVAC work. We hear about it alot and needing to do it, so it seems like it should be a pretty normal and routine procedure, one that might be easy enough to do without calling for an AC technician. Especially if you've ever recharged the AC on your car. But this isn't quite the case. There are a few key differences between doing an AC recharge on the system in your car as opposed to the system in your home.

Phoenix Recharge A/C
Phoenix Recharge A/C
Doing home Phoenix recharge A/C is a much more regulated procedure. There aren't any laws to prohibit you from doing it on your own system, but you will want to be aware of this so you don't try to do it for someone else and end up facing fines or other legal troubles. Doing AC recharges on a car is a much less regulated job, you can go to a car shop and easily find all the tools and materials needed to recharge the system without a lot of hassle. Trying to buy refrigerant for a home HVAC system is much harder. Unless you are licensed it will be very hard to find someone willing to sell you refrigerant. If you can't even buy refrigerant, then there is no way you'll be able to do your own Phoenix recharge A/C.

Phoenix Recharge A/C
Phoenix Recharge A/C
When you try to do Phoenix recharge A/C on a home system, you are also dealing with some more dangerous components. The electrical power that runs a home AC system is much greater than the electrical power that is running your car air conditioning unit. The car uses mostly mechanical energy, which is still dangerous but much easier to see and avoid in most cases. It is very easy to accidentally forget and then get shocked and injured by. Working in a home HVAC unit requires much more caution and safety than working on the AC in your car.

Wednesday, October 26, 2016

The Changing World of Phoenix Recharge A/C

Phoenix Recharge A/C
Phoenix Recharge A/C
For a long time, our air conditioning systems have been using Freeon for Phoenix recharge A/C.  But this might be changing soon.  The Environmental Protection Agency has been working to get rid of R-22, also known as Freeon, in order to use a greener refrigerant.  The EPA has been cracking down on the sale and use of Freeon as well as preventing companies from manufacturing systems that need Freeon to work.


Though it is a hard process to make a major shift like this, we can expect that the end will be near.  In about 3 years, 2020, the EPA plans on Freeon not being sold commercially.  This means that we as residential HVAC users have two options: make a stock pile of old/recycled/hoarded Freeon and continue using it even though it isn't good for the environment, or upgrade our system to work with a new Phoenix recharge A/C.
Phoenix Recharge A/C
Phoenix Recharge A/C

Changing over a system can be a process in itself.  If you still want to use your HVAC system, you can have it fitted to handle a new pressure and cleaned to get all the old Freeon out.  A simpler but more expensive (at least initially) option is to get a new system.  A new system should come ready to handle the new refrigerant, making less time for work to be done only to be replaced in a few years.


So why bother with the upgrade?  A new refrigerant doesn't give off hydro-chlorofluorocarbons, which are a danger to the environment.  Additionally, as Freeon supplies dwindle, the cost for a can of Freeon will just keep rising, meaning that while it may be a lot of money to switch or upgrade your system, it can actually save you money in a few years.  Hopefully we are making advances in what refrigerants we use too, so the new choices should help our systems to be more efficient and work better to keep us comfortable.



The world's always changing in ways we don't see.  Phoenix recharge A/C is just one of the changing things we don't always see, but it is something we should prepare for and at least know that it is coming up.