What Steve is talking about is an alternative refrigerant product sold in some places. If the can says 134a, it is 134a. Most of the DIY cans will say 134a+ to indicate that it also contains lubricants, leak indicators, and sealers.

Bill Bina

On 10/5/2013 9:57 PM, Jim Watts wrote:
Uh-oh. Is that going to make a difference to your liver?


On 5 October 2013 18:52, Wally Bryant <w...@wbryant.com> wrote:
Can you clarify that?  I thought that if the can said R134a it would contain R134a.

Wal


Steve Thomas wrote:
Whatever you do, don't use one of those refrigerant replacement kits that they sell in the automotive stores. They use a mixture
of butane and propane to approximate the characteristics of the more-or-less chemically inert gases used originally.

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