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A little common sense, and some mechanical aptitude is all that is needed. If indeed lacking in either is questionable, by all means stay away from these gauges! With a little bit of each from above, I had mine up and running for almost two years without one single tech support/warranty claim. I am no part-timer! They are my go-to gauges and are used most everyday throughout the year in refer work and A/C. If they do ever die, they will be replaced with identical gauges!!!!
Originally Posted by hvac5646 Yes, but aren't hydraulic flares and fittings different than ACR (or SAE, what ever you prefer)? ACR flare are 45*and hydraulicno are 60*No? Its actually 37 degrees but I am talking quality of the fitting. Any decent hydraulic or fitting supply store or whatever is around you will have those fittings.
Originally Posted by Reeferman Not all of those connectors are created equal. Go to a hydraulic supply store and get a set of higher quality fittings. If the ones you have are cheap chinaman made crap fittings which I suspect they are then chances are good that they will leak. I have had this issue in the past with those fittings. After getting the decent ones they would not leak even after multiple mountings to different manifolds. You will see the difference. If however this is a deal breaker for you then disregard the above. Yes, but aren't hydraulic flares and fittings different than ACR (or SAE, what ever you prefer)? ACR flare are 45*and hydraulicno are 60*No?
Not all of those connectors are created equal. Go to a hydraulic supply store and get a set of higher quality fittings. If the ones you have are cheap chinaman made crap fittings which I suspect they are then chances are good that they will leak. I have had this issue in the past with those fittings. After getting the decent ones they would not leak even after multiple mountings to different manifolds. You will see the difference. If however this is a deal breaker for you then disregard the above.
Originally Posted by hvac5646 Tes, but what i don't seem to get is that they think is a forgivable defect. I have read the archives before registering and have found copious mention of other refer analyzers with a similar malfunction and the owners were not the least bit forgiving of the gauge st, in fact the criticism is so extreme as to be demonizing. Why does the AK900 get a pass on the same malfunction? There seem to be two different problems. One I know nothing about and the other I'm with kiwi as I've made this connection plenty of times.
Originally Posted by itsiceman There has been a lot written about others manufacturers too. The advantage with Digi-Cool is you can put it on any manifold you want. If you have a favorite one that never leaks use that one. Most of them of them that are permanently attached to the manifold. Some of them make you send the whole thing back to the factory be serviced so you have nothing but a wet finger to test with till it gets back. Tes, but what i don't seem to get is that they think is a forgivable defect. I have read the archives before registering and have found copious mention of other refer analyzers with a similar malfunction and the owners were not the least bit forgiving of the gauge st, in fact the criticism is so extreme as to be demonizing. Why does the AK900 get a pass on the same malfunction?
Originally Posted by hvac5646 If I'm not mistaken there is has been a lot written on the AK900 concerning the leak problem. Can't see where the advantage of owning one would be an reason to buy one. Originally Posted by hvac5646 If I'm not mistaken, a lot has been written-about the leak the AK 9000 has. What is the advantage of owning one in that case? Takes away the confidence that inspires a person to want one. There has been a lot written about others manufacturers too. The advantage with Digi-Cool is you can put it on any manifold you want. If you have a favorite one that never leaks use that one. Most of them of them that are permanently attached to the manifold. Some of them make you send the whole thing back to the factory be serviced so you have nothing but a wet finger to test with till it gets back.
Originally Posted by hvac5646 If I'm not mistaken, a lot has been written-about the leak the AK 9000 has. What is the advantage of owning one in that case? Takes away the confidence that inspires a person to want one. The leak is not really in the gauge but in the manifold you can buy it with. If I decide that I want it I'll simply buy it without the manifold and put it on on I know is good.
The ole leaky ball valve strikes again and I have to call tech support. Lmao! 3pt - sent this from his DUMB-PHONE
If I'm not mistaken, a lot has been written-about the leak the AK 9000 has. What is the advantage of owning one in that case? Takes away the confidence that inspires a person to want one.
If I'm not mistaken there is has been a lot written on the AK900 concerning the leak problem. Can't see where the advantage of owning one would be an reason to buy one.
Originally Posted by Questor So, I've been waffling over a set of digital gauges, and after much research and decision making, I finally bit the bullet and picked up the Digi-Cool AK900. Upon initial assembly of the new AK900, I discovered there was a leak on the low side where the manifold connects to the DRSA. After applying nylog and re-seating, I tested with nitrogen and the manifold and hoses showed no leaks at any point, so I figured it was good to go... Working on 134a cap tube reach in that wasn't pulling down to temp, got to work, and after charging the system, during final checks as it was pulling down to temp, found that AGAIN, the low side connection to the manifold of the DRSA was leaking, so I took them off. Later I hooked up my nitrogen bottle and found gas blowing out of the low side connection to the AK900, same place as before, right out at the connection to the manifold! I looked over the fittings again, re-seated and AGAIN pressure tested it, and have no idea why it suddenly let vapor blow out like that, after also holding pressure for some time when charging... The nitrogen stream at 100psi was quite audible and obvious. The AK900 manual explicitly cautions against overtightening these, but perhaps I took this too seriously. I'm so bummed, I now don't trust these gauges / manifold 100%, has anyone else seen this?! Perhaps I didn't seat them right, or there was a spec of machine chaff or flash in there, I visually inspected the seat and connection points and all seemed fine. This will be the third time I've connected the manifold to the AK900 and we'll see how it goes! Sorry bud, I assume you are an engineer and have trouble making a simple connection! OMG.
Originally Posted by hvac wiz 79 Only thing that irks me is the fact I can't have equal pressures other than 0 Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk 2 The low side transducer has a higher sensitivity and will read slightly different to the high side.
Originally Posted by hvac wiz 79 Only thing that irks me is the fact I can't have equal pressures other than 0 Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk 2 Have you tried to zero them under a low vacuum in the psia mode? Depending where you are they will not read zero psig
I had to tighten that Allen screw as mine was leaking into the system not out. It was a WIF that I just had repaired a leak on. I added adequate charge to start the pull down ... go inside to check temps . . Came back to roof to see the left half of manifold frozen over including my hose. Checked the scale and it was -3lbs from where I left it. Not an overcharge as a result but could of been. The valve was off ... tightened the screw been ok since. I can tell from the way these are assembled they do not test them at the factory which I bet isn't uncommon for a manifold. The gauge itself have been good. Only thing that irks me is the fact I can't have equal pressures other than 0 Sent from my SGH-T999 using Tapatalk 2
Originally Posted by filiberto My high-side valve on my 9-month old AK's have started leaking. Anyone know if there is a repair part that is field-replaceable? I've emailed Brenda, just waiting for a response. What do you mean by leaking? Did you try tightening up that allen screw on the side of the manifold? I would bet that is your issue! Be careful, It does not take much. Youll fell the knob hard to turn if you over tighten it.
I bought a set of AK900 Gauges last summer and the only problem I had was the high side hose connection leaked after hooking up to a running system. I tightened it down good (don't be scared) with a pair of channel locks and it solved the problem. I will probably take it apart and use nylog on it before the cooling season comes up next year. Other than that small (easily fixable) problem I have had nothing but positive things to say about these gauges. To anyone that is on the fence about these, buy them, you will not be disappointed!
Subscribing.... wonder if this is a wide spread issue. I've been on the fence with these for quite some time. I always end up one click away from confirming my order.
My high-side valve on my 9-month old AK's have started leaking. Anyone know if there is a repair part that is field-replaceable? I've emailed Brenda, just waiting for a response.
Thanks all, I'll tighten those connections a little bit and see how it goes! FWIW - the leak is at the nut that connects the manifold to the AK900 not the NPT side, those seem secure.
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