Postby Ferris » 28 Jun 2008 14:19
Dan - The Sanden compressor will push the refrigerant around just fine. But, there are a couple of other things you should know when doing an R134a conversion.
First are the seals. If your car still has its original rubber o-ring seals in the various hose connections, they will need to be changed to neoprene types to avoid leaks. R134a will creep right by them.
Second is oil. R12 used a mineral type oil which R134a will not pick up and carry. Popular opinion is that the mineral oil does no harm once converted - it just settles at the bottom of the condenser, evaporator, and drier - but it does no good either. You'll need to add PAG oil to protect the compressor and expansion valve.
Last is efficiency loss. R12 is a more efficient refrigerant in cars than R134a is, owing to its lower boiling point. If you look at the pressure / temperature curve of both, R134a is 10-15 psi higher at every temp point a car will see. Because of this, newer cars designed to use it have bigger parts - condensers and evaporators in particular. Head pressure is often much higher, but the Sanden can take it. Higher suction pressures, though, equal higher evaporator temp, and warmer air from the ducts.
Fortunately, a TR7 cabin is so small, and the evaporator is so close to you, that cooling should still be acceptable. But, with the original parts, it won't be quite as good as R12.
The conversions I have done have had mixed results. Rolls Royces, for example, work great after conversion, since the AC parts in them could cool your house. Jaguars - terrible. Their AC systems are marginal on R12 already, and don't work worth a flip on R134a.
Like FI Spyder said, I'd be keen to know how it turns out.
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It's true! Bob IS my uncle!
Kevin Anderson
(2)1980 TR7 DHC
1990 Jaguar XJ40