Quote:
Originally Posted by leathermang
I still think that the oil in the pockets will not be evacuated without some kind of actual flush.... it settled in the pockets because the refrigerant was able to pass it without taking it with it in the stream...think ' eddy '...or 'pool '..... and hooking up a recovery machine will not affect that physics situation... I say that taking oil out by physical removal of the receiver-dryer is probably the most direct and effective and cheapest way.
A recovery machine , if the TXvalve is left in place, can not get a significant flow of refrigerant ... it is not like it can cause turbulence in those pockets ... to stir up and mix it with the refrigerant...
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Agreed, but the op just needs SOME oil removed. And the only way to remove the dryer legally is to recover the refrigerant... So...
I promise you... Recovery machines remove oil with the recovery. They pull liquid refrigerant out of the system, and oil is dissolved in the liquid. It's why all true recovery machines have oil separators built in.