Tom, R134 systems use PAG oil, if they were installed by a shop that
flushed the system or in newer cars. PAG oil is indeed not compatible with
mineral oil used in R12 systems. But ester oil is compatible with both.
Ester oil is an alternative for systems converted from R12 that might have
traces of mineral oil in them.
Larry, if it just needs a little, you can get a can of refrigerant with the
oil mixed in, but only R134 these days. If you are using HC12A/Duracool,
both mineral and ester oil will work, but ester oil might be the safer bet
if you don't know what's in it and it just needs to be topped up. You can
evacuate the system and pour the oil right into the back of the compressor.
I seem to recall (and this is a fuzzy memory) that only a pint is used in
the system and maybe even less (I'm visualizing the bottle in my dim memory
and it might have been 10-12 ounces), so it should not take much to top it
off. But you'll have to open the system. The question is: Where did the oil
that was in it go? Losing compressor oil isn't common.
Rick "who, come to think of it, needs to charge his system and see if it
works" Denney
> Larry, oil type depends upon your installed refrigerant. R12 and HC12a use
> mineral oil, NAPA TEM 209500. R134a use ester oil. The oils are not
> compatible. If you have converted to R134a, you can go anywhere (Wal-Mart,
> Menards, auto parts stores) and purchase a can that goes in the low port.
> I don't know about installing mineral oil. I do need to know. I need to
> install new A6.
> Tom, MS II running the Honda and the overhead air.
> --
> 1975 GMC Avion
> KA4CSG
>
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'73 X-Glacier 230 "Jaws"
Northern Virginia
Offlist email: rick at rickdenney dot com