Gilbertd wrote:
You'll need a pair of these,https://www.amazon.co.uk/Connector-Extractor-Condition-Adjustable-Coupler/dp/B083M2CV1P/ref=sr_1_21_sspa. The standard connection on all AC hoses is a 1/4" flare so you'd need the correct hoses too, although for the price you could even splash out and get yourself a kit like this https://www.amazon.co.uk/KATSU-Tools-Manifold-Conditioner-Refill/dp/B094R8NCVZ/ref=sr_1_5 so you will have the connectors and hoses.
The recommendation is not to use air to pressure test as it will introduce moisture which means you should really replace the dryer. However, there's thousands of cars that have been running around with no refrigerant in them for years before someone decides to sort things out and the while system will have been full of air all that time and a simple regas will do the job.
£50, that's not too scary really. I've ordered them. My system was empty for around 5 yrs before I got the car anyway. I was discussing the use of necessary 'trades' that we've had to use over the last 35 years and 3/4 of them have done a bad job or ripped me off as I later discovered. I'm self taught in most DIY things now around the home and competent at most things except AC!
A few examples..
When I was 19 I picked up a rear tyre puncture on my rd400 yamaha, nail into the inner tube, removed the wheel on the side of the road and walked 3 miles with it to the nearest tyre place. They patched the tube while I waited , pumped it up and I walked back to the bike and refitted it. Set off home and only made it a few hundred yards and it was flat again. Got recovered back home by my dad who had finished work by then and we picked up some tyre irons and removed the wheel again and the tyre to find a hole perfectly in the middle of the inner tube patch repair., and the original nail still in the tyre poking through inside.
I'm now 25 got my first house and a leak was evident on the roof near the gutter, rang a roofer from the local paper who came whilst I was at work to do the job after looking and quoting the day before. Said 3 tiles were cracked (concrete) and would need replacing and the under felt had rotted. A couple of years later the roof leaked again, same place so I decided to have a look myself, found the broken tiles had been siliconed together and a couple of plastic tesco carrier bags had been used to patch the felt.
I'm now 29 (not now now, I'm 61 but was 29 then) sold that house to buy the one I'm in now. Decided to have a swanky alarm system fitted after being accosted at the exit of B&Q by a canvasser. This actually made TV news and the guy was jailed over it, long story short, he fitted a timer in the alarm control box that knocked the system out when the warranty expired, so you had to pay for a repair, I and other victims didnt know this of course,but the nice guy did apologise for the malfunction of the system and after fitting a new battery and some other bits gave me a hefty bill but as a gesture of goodwill also gave me another 12 months warranty on the whole system free of charge as "these units never go wrong and I've just been unlucky"
15 months later and the system goes down again, getting suspicious I rang a different alarm company who found this relay and removed it and suggested I rang trading standards. I did so and they had already built a case up against him after numerous complaints.
The rangey needed 4 new tyres when I got it, shame really as they were all perilli scorpions with loads of tread but perished after standing for 5 yrs. National tyres had an offer on 4 new tyres with free mobile fitting so for convenience I had that done then drove the 2 or 3 miles to their local branch to have the tracking done as I had replaced every steering component with new during the recommisioning. Then straight to the mot place where she sailed through. The next bit is really my fault, but 4k miles after the new tyres and tracking were done I had my head under the front looking for an oil leak and noticed no tread at all on the inner quarter width on both fronts, the bit you can't easily see with the wheels straight ahead, but that's how it's always parked. Went somewhere else who said it was miles out and did it properly, been fine since. She seemed to steer fine with the tracking out but as it was my first 38 and my other car is an old defender I never thought anything was wrong.
Since my early years I've moved on a lot and built a two storey extention from digging the footings, casting the reinforced raft right up to the chimney pot and all internal work, everything except the plaster skim, just can't get the knack of that. Fitted new bathroom and kitchen, knocked down internal walls, built staircases, dry lined the cellar, made iron railings, laid a block paving drive, fitted a log burner, built my 110 on a galv chassis, restored a few Japanese motorbikes and hospitalised my self twice and set myself on fire once.
Got my first p38 2.5dhse 2022, but owned much simpler landrovers for 30 years , series 3 , sold, and also a 110 200tdi csw that I've owned for 20 yrs. Rebuilt it then on a new galv chassis and bulkhead. The p38 hurts my simple underworked brain especially electrical things.