Im in Orange County and me & my pops are looking for a spot to recharge my E30. Any suggestions?
A/C Question
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R12 is not available to the public, as you have to have your 608 certs to legally obtain it. you'd be better off going with a conversion anyways and having a shop charge it, instead of doing it with little bottles of refrigerant. those bottles have about 1oz of PAG oil in them per bottle, and a typical A/C system contains approx. 3oz total. i dont know about the system on an e30, but an average system takes approximately 1.2-1.5lb of refrigerant on top of that, so if you did it by cans, you would have way too much oil in the system and it would not cool properly.Comment
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Seems like you'd be better off removing the AC, unless you wanted to pay $800 to have a conversion done.R12 is not available to the public, as you have to have your 608 certs to legally obtain it. you'd be better off going with a conversion anyways and having a shop charge it, instead of doing it with little bottles of refrigerant. those bottles have about 1oz of PAG oil in them per bottle, and a typical A/C system contains approx. 3oz total. i dont know about the system on an e30, but an average system takes approximately 1.2-1.5lb of refrigerant on top of that, so if you did it by cans, you would have way too much oil in the system and it would not cool properly.paint sucksComment
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Yea there's this guy that's right next to Mossimo's vespa shop. It's on Superior Ave. He completely rebuilt my AC to perfection and it blows ICE cold now. Go to him. He'll do it right.Comment
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buy yourself a new receiver/drier,the 2 fittings and a expansion valve, have a shop evac the R12 (should be free of charge if they keep the R12), do the conversion in half an hour, and go back to have it filled to exact specs. That shouldn't cost you more than $150-200 topsComment
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I'm not sure if it's legal to recharge a system with R12 any more. I thought you had to do an R134a conversion... there any truth to this?paint sucksComment




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