Omega Owners Forum
Chat Area => General Car Chat => Topic started by: omega3000 on 18 July 2014, 11:03:52
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I read a few feedback from people that that have used these recharge bottles and they have had very good results :) Anyone used them for Omega's :-\
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I don't think they work...... :-\
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I read a few feedback from people that that have used these recharge bottles and they have had very good results :) Anyone used them for Omega's :-\
I heard different, rubbish results :-\
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For the canister and adaptor its about £54 but dependent on how much gas needed it can be used many times over , reviews/feedback are very good :y
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If you shop around you can get your AC recharged properly for less. ATS £46 for example. :y
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For the canister and adaptor its about £54 but dependent on how much gas needed it can be used many times over , reviews/feedback are very good :y
Er no, most cars need a half kilo of gas, the Omega closer to 1kg..............so I have never seen them get even close to being cheaper or worthwhile.
And lets be honest, you don't just 'top' you gas up, you wait until the dam things either barely working or not working at which point you need a full refill.
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For the canister and adaptor its about £54 but dependent on how much gas needed it can be used many times over , reviews/feedback are very good :y
Er no, most cars need a half kilo of gas, the Omega closer to 1kg..............so I have never seen them get even close to being cheaper or worthwhile.
And lets be honest, you don't just 'top' you gas up, you wait until the dam things either barely working or not working at which point you need a full refill.
Damn and blast ! These Omega's are thirsty with everything ;D A total waste on the Omega then unless it just needs a top up :(
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A single bottle wont do any car, there f-ing useless and to be honest, given the legislation on aircon recharging, should be banned.
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For the canister and adaptor its about £54 but dependent on how much gas needed it can be used many times over , reviews/feedback are very good :y
Er no, most cars need a half kilo of gas, the Omega closer to 1kg..............so I have never seen them get even close to being cheaper or worthwhile.
And lets be honest, you don't just 'top' you gas up, you wait until the dam things either barely working or not working at which point you need a full refill.
Damn and blast ! These Omega's are thirsty with everything ;D A total waste on the Omega then unless it just needs a top up :(
Except petrol...... ::) ::) ;D
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These things can't tell you if there's a leak. Which could be the reason it's stopped working in the first place. In which case you may as well just empty the canister to atmosphere which is highly illegal.
So give the money to me instead. :)
Although you might prefer to give less money to an ac specialist capable of diagnosing the problem correctly. As said 900g of gas in the omega, with two ac fans. It's quite efficient on the omega, where new stuff gets barely 350 and on,y one fan. Its a good system, if looked after.
Penny wise pound foolish rarely works, especially not on an omega. Needs a proper job in most areas. ;)
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For the canister and adaptor its about £54 but dependent on how much gas needed it can be used many times over , reviews/feedback are very good :y
most places charge £40.00 for a regas, shop around locally might get it down to £35., and that will put the right amount of refrigerant, oil in and check for leaks,
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Seen a seal replacement kit at Alfods , best get the valve changed and some new seals in before anything ::)
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Seen a seal replacement kit at Alfods , best get the valve changed and some new seals in before anything ::)
Most AC places will check it free of charge, and will only charge you if the system is leak tight and you have functioning AC. :y
So take it to an AC place and then you'll know if it's leaking and if so where from. ;)
Have you pressed the valve in? Does it hiss? ???
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Seen a seal replacement kit at Alfods , best get the valve changed and some new seals in before anything ::)
Slap head smilie to General Car Chat asap ::)
Mr EMD, there are things that Helfrods are good for... and there are things you buy from other places.
Aircon is something you get from other places :y
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Seen a seal replacement kit at Alfods , best get the valve changed and some new seals in before anything ::)
Most AC places will check it free of charge, and will only charge you if the system is leak tight and you have functioning AC. :y
So take it to an AC place and then you'll know if it's leaking and if so where from. ;)
Have you pressed the valve in? Does it hiss? ???
No hissing at all :(
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Seen a seal replacement kit at Alfods , best get the valve changed and some new seals in before anything ::)
Most AC places will check it free of charge, and will only charge you if the system is leak tight and you have functioning AC. :y
So take it to an AC place and then you'll know if it's leaking and if so where from. ;)
Have you pressed the valve in? Does it hiss? ???
No hissing at all :(
See above...
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Stupid question?
Is there such a thing as a RadWeld equivalent for air con systems, to plug a leak in the radiator?
Ron.
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Seen a seal replacement kit at Alfods , best get the valve changed and some new seals in before anything ::)
Most AC places will check it free of charge, and will only charge you if the system is leak tight and you have functioning AC. :y
So take it to an AC place and then you'll know if it's leaking and if so where from. ;)
Have you pressed the valve in? Does it hiss? ???
No hissing at all :(
See above...
Will do :y
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Stupid question?
Is there such a thing as a RadWeld equivalent for air con systems, to plug a leak in the radiator?
Ron.
If there is then you shouldn't use it foir exactly the same reasons why you shouldn't use it bin the cooling system ::)
As with most things, it is better, easier and cheaper to fix the problem than the symptoms :y
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In which case you have a leak and when fixed it needs vaccing down for a period of time to boil the moisture off
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Stupid question?
Is there such a thing as a RadWeld equivalent for air con systems, to plug a leak in the radiator?
Ron.
yup Halfords sell it, if you ask they will "fit" a bottle or two for you, if no impovement no charge.
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Stupid question?
Is there such a thing as a RadWeld equivalent for air con systems, to plug a leak in the radiator?
Ron.
yup Halfords sell it, if you ask they will "fit" a bottle or two for you, if no impovement no charge.
No, no, no, and just no... :o
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Just replaced valve on the 3.2, cost £3.50 from Vauxhall :)
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I just topped the aircon up with one of those bottles from Halfords. I already have the connector with the gauge though so it cost me £34.
My aircon is now fine. But I was able to check mine first with the connector I have and I could see that there was gas, just not enough.
Thanks
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I just topped the aircon up with one of those bottles from Halfords. I already have the connector with the gauge though so it cost me £34.
My aircon is now fine. But I was able to check mine first with the connector I have and I could see that there was gas, just not enough.
Thanks
But how much. You can't tell. That's one reason why these refills are a waste of time.
If the refrigerant has leaked out over time, something else will have replaced it, and this needs to be removed before refilling with refrig. That's another reason why these refills are a waste of time.
TBH, the money spent on these is better spent on getting specialists to do it - unless you have the correct equipment, which isn't the refill adapters that Halfords sell.
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£34! just another £15 would have seen the job done properly!
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I read a few feedback from people that that have used these recharge bottles and they have had very good results :) Anyone used them for Omega's :-\
if you need you air con services you can visit my place
I do offer for oof members £30 :y
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I just topped the aircon up with one of those bottles from Halfords. I already have the connector with the gauge though so it cost me £34.
My aircon is now fine. But I was able to check mine first with the connector I have and I could see that there was gas, just not enough.
Thanks
But how much. You can't tell. That's one reason why these refills are a waste of time.
If the refrigerant has leaked out over time, something else will have replaced it, and this needs to be removed before refilling with refrig. That's another reason why these refills are a waste of time.
TBH, the money spent on these is better spent on getting specialists to do it - unless you have the correct equipment, which isn't the refill adapters that Halfords sell.
I can tell as the connector I have, which I never said I got from Halfords, has a pressure gauge. This told me that the system had gas in it and it was just below the required amount to make the system run.
If it had told me anything else then I would have either done nothing and lived without aircon or taken it to a specialist which I don't have time for.
Guess what, I put some gas in, not the whole bottle by any means, and now I have ice cold air conditioning.
Here was me thinking this was a friendly site....
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Oh dear, someone who cannot take advice. Throws toys out of the pram ::) ;D ;D
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Presure varies with temperature, which is why the system is charged by weight not volume, and why topups don't work...
Still, not my car ::)
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Last time i had my aircon recharged, i used a mobile guy...who
firstly...filled the system with nitrogen and put a pressure gauge on it, to check for leaks...
secondly...vac'd the system out
thirdly.....refilled with refrigerant with added dye
fourthly....had pressure gauges on both valves (low and high pressure side) to balance the system
So, unless you've got all this kit and know what your doing, its a professional job, imo
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I read a few feedback from people that that have used these recharge bottles and they have had very good results :) Anyone used them for Omega's :-\
if you need you air con services you can visit my place
I do offer for oof members £30 :y
Thanks for that Serek , will give you a ring next week ;)
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I just topped the aircon up with one of those bottles from Halfords. I already have the connector with the gauge though so it cost me £34.
My aircon is now fine. But I was able to check mine first with the connector I have and I could see that there was gas, just not enough.
Thanks
But how much. You can't tell. That's one reason why these refills are a waste of time.
If the refrigerant has leaked out over time, something else will have replaced it, and this needs to be removed before refilling with refrig. That's another reason why these refills are a waste of time.
TBH, the money spent on these is better spent on getting specialists to do it - unless you have the correct equipment, which isn't the refill adapters that Halfords sell.
I can tell as the connector I have, which I never said I got from Halfords, has a pressure gauge. This told me that the system had gas in it and it was just below the required amount to make the system run.
If it had told me anything else then I would have either done nothing and lived without aircon or taken it to a specialist which I don't have time for.
Guess what, I put some gas in, not the whole bottle by any means, and now I have ice cold air conditioning.
Here was me thinking this was a friendly site....
Hopefully snowy is still lurking...
If you have decent pressure gauges connected to both HP and LP sides, you can do a DIY, *BUT* not just by topping it up, as you cannot tell how much is in there - so you have to start again, from scratch.
Vac it all out, this needs a decent pump. The longer you can vac it for, the more you can boil off. An hour or more is better, though most automated machines are 15-20 mins. To comply with UK regulations, the contents must be captured and disposed of properly.
Close the valves, disconnect vac pump, and leave it for as long as possible to see if any increase in pressure, indicating a leak. Most leaks cannot be detected in a few mins, so again leave as long as possible. Hours is ideal, though most automated machines is 10-15m, which is why Shitfit will regas, say no leaks, but its stopped working within a week.
Then put in the correct amount of PAG46 and R134a, which from memory is 150ml and 950g respectively, but check first. The R134a **HAS** to be put in by weight. Not pressure. Hence, scales. Hence you can't just "top up" a partially full system.
As you can see, specialist equipment is needed, even if not specifically for A/C. And topping up is not an option.
The ramifications for getting it wrong range from working sub standardly to severe burns or exploding compressors.
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I read a few feedback from people that that have used these recharge bottles and they have had very good results :) Anyone used them for Omega's :-\
if you need you air con services you can visit my place
I do offer for oof members £30 :y
Form an orderly que please :) :y another splendid deal for OOFers.
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ALL...advice given on here is based soundly on years of Omega ownership/experience and in many many cases finding ways around the problem with a certain degree of ingenuity that your local VX dealer will NOT even if in possession of that information reduce your mortgage size repair bills....So pin your lugholes back and listen to the vast amount of good advice that is given FREELY!! without charge..OR...go your own sweet way and F**k your car up!!!! :y :y
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I read a few feedback from people that that have used these recharge bottles and they have had very good results :) Anyone used them for Omega's :-\
if you need you air con services you can visit my place
I do offer for oof members £30 :y
Form an orderly que please :) :y another splendid deal for OOFers.
Will be going round sometime next week , spect it will be bloody freezing outside by then ;D
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You can ezchill a car.
But only if you already have cold air coming out and it really is a top up.
Omega holds nearly a kilo of gas, twice as much as most modern cars. And you would need two ezchill bottles to fill a really low system. So no point to it in that situation.
No cold air, then replace valves, put dye in, get it vacuumed and filled by kwikfit.
Btw, the only way to get the system optimal is a vac followed by a weighed refill.
You can use gauges and temperature charts, but reality is its easier to weigh it, preferably with an automatic charge machine.
Ezchil can boost a system that needs a squirt, but the low gauge is a bit of a guess. Use the temp gauge On the ezchill gauge, very important to avoid overfills!
Also ezchill is not really useful for diagnosis, as it does not read the high pressure side.
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You can ezchill a car...
You're correct, you can. But there are several very good reasons why doing so is retarded.
Not least because...
1. A bottle of the stuff costs about the same as having the system filled correctly.
2. Unless you're Gandalf or God, you will have absolutely no idea how much the system needs to top it up.
3. Putting the wrong amount in can cause as much damage as leaving the system empty.
4. Adding refrigerant to a leaky system is illegal.
5. Such topping up does nothing to address or test for any leaks.
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You can ezchill a car...
You're correct, you can. But there are several very good reasons why doing so is retarded.
Not least because...
1. A bottle of the stuff costs about the same as having the system filled correctly.
2. Unless you're Gandalf or God, you will have absolutely no idea how much the system needs to top it up.
3. Putting the wrong amount in can cause as much damage as leaving the system empty.
4. Adding refrigerant to a leaky system is illegal.
5. Such topping up does nothing to address or test for any leaks.
.. plus the fact that every time you disturb the valves to top the system up you risk the valve not seating properly, leaving you worse off than when you started. ;)
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Get to Serek's while the discount is on ::) Think he's booked up for 3 months now :D ;D ;D But he will fit you in :y
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If near Melton Mowbray then Astons will do your aircon for sub thirty quid
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You can ezchill a car...
You're correct, you can. But there are several very good reasons why doing so is retarded.
Not least because...
1. A bottle of the stuff costs about the same as having the system filled correctly.
2. Unless you're Gandalf or God, you will have absolutely no idea how much the system needs to top it up.
3. Putting the wrong amount in can cause as much damage as leaving the system empty.
4. Adding refrigerant to a leaky system is illegal.
5. Such topping up does nothing to address or test for any leaks.
A bottle of ezchill costs about £25. A service at kiwkfit costs £50. The ezchill will top up roughly 3 cars. I base this on the 10% yearly loss in every system that happens naturally. So given my rough guess ezchill cists £9 per top up for 3 top ups. 3 services costs £150. Nothing retarded about my maths, as you can see.
Yes, you have no idea how much gas is in the system. But that doesnt stop you getting the low side pressure to what it should be for r134a, as there is a standard pressure for each ambient temperature.
All systems leak. So by your logic all aircon is illegal.
If you have a large leak, dont top up.
Putting too much in can cause the system to not work, or possibly damage it in the worse case. So read and follow the instructions.
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Ez chill etc is for stupid, lazy people.
Ignoring the fact that you cannot accurately fill or test the system with it, your maths is flawed.
10% leakage is an industry assumed/accepted amount, and often used to scare people into buying shit they don't need. Not all systems are anything like that leaky. Also by the time you have figured out that you have a reasonable size leak, you've dumped a can into the atmosphere... so that's £35 thrown away without trying.
Different systems contain different weights of refrigerant, fact. Pressure and volume both vary with temperature, fact. So unless you can accurately measure the weight of gas into any given system, having first vacuumed it down and pressure tested it, then you're never going to get repeatable results with a can an gauge.
Achieving a working system by guesswork is luck, it won't ensure that the system is functioning correctly, and it certainly won't be reliable or effective.
I'll wager that you use radweld and ezy start too :-X
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My system has worked perfectly for the last 7 years without a service, so not sure where my 10% a year has gone. ;)
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OK, lets try to keep this factual and friendly, not abusive and personal.
Ignore the 10% per year, if you're losing that much, you have a leak. Its an industry marketing/protection value, not reality.
If you're losing r134a, you are also losing PAG46, and running low on that will cause damage to the compressor and make all the seals in the system leak. The only way to accurately fill the system is by weight. Everything else is a guess, including pressure. In addition, when R134a leaks out, something often takes its place, be it moisture or air, which can only be removed by vac.
For this reason, I would never refill mine with the refill kits, and believe it would be poor, possibly irresponsible advice for me to recommend it to others, esp when its usually easy enough to fine a specialist who can do it properly for around the price of a can and a half of refill kit.
Advice is all OOF can give, members are of course welcome to follow or ignore, based of their own circumstances and beliefs :)
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My system has worked perfectly for the last 7 years without a service, so not sure where my 10% a year has gone. ;)
According to the service history, TBE hasn't been done since it left the factory, and its still chilly. The Silver Bullet needed doing after about 11yrs after the compressor leaked and needed replacing.
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Sage words indeed TB, holibobs must be working 8)
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All aircon systems in cars leak through natural leakage. The rubber hoses and seals are porous and will let out a small amount of gas all the time. Google aircon natural leakage.
When I have used Ez chill to top up my cars I tend to use 1/3 can every time. The cans cost £25 as there is a £10 return surchage. So for me it has cost £8 every two years.
And to answer one of the previous posters, I'm not stupid or lazy. I just understand aircon systems.
No doubt this will get some peoples blood boiling - but I am not saying they are wrong. If you want to vacuum and weigh every time with your car, great. But, sorry to disappoint people, I have been looking after my 3 cars aircon for 5 years now and they all still work fine :y
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And I have been known to use washing up liquid to clean my cars... I wouldn't dream of suggesting others followed my lead ::)
But as TB said, repeated for clarity...
... and believe it would be poor, possibly irresponsible advice for me to recommend it to others, esp when its usually easy enough to fine a specialist who can do it properly for around the price of a can and a half of refill kit.
Thank you and goodnight :-X
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If you read my posts I have never suggested that people use EzChill. I am just giving them information. I don't see information as being dangerous. Knowledge is power, as they say.
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ALL...advice given on here is based soundly on years of Omega ownership/experience and in many many cases finding ways around the problem with a certain degree of ingenuity that your local VX dealer will NOT even if in possession of that information reduce your mortgage size repair bills....So pin your lugholes back and listen to the vast amount of good advice that is given FREELY!! without charge..OR...go your own sweet way and F**k your car up!!!! :y :y
:y :y