29.9565
V = 1/3πh ( R12 + R22 + R1R2 )where π is 3.14159265..., and R1, R2 are the radii of the two bases.
Lateral Surface Area = π(r1 + r2)s = π(r1 + r2)√((r1 - r2)2 + h2)Top Surface Area = πr12Base Surface Area = πr22Total Surface Area = π(r12 + r22 + (r1 * r2) * s) = π[ r12 + r22 + (r1 * r2) * √((r1 - r2)2 + h2) ]
For a conical frustum:Lateral Surface Area = π(r1 + r2)s = π(r1 + r2)√((r1 - r2)2 + h2)Top Surface Area = πr12Base Surface Area = πr22Total Surface Area = π(r12 + r22 + (r1 * r2) * s) = π[ r12 + r22 + (r1 * r2) * √((r1 - r2)2 + h2) ]
Density = Mass/[(1/3*pi*h) * (R12 + R22 + R1*R2)] where h is the height of the frustum, and R1 and R2 are the radii of the two circular sections.
R-12..........
No
I think that it's olive oil, but I/m not sure
no. it is not a good idea. new hfc refrigerants require a different type of oil than the R22 units. the new refrigerants typically run at higher pressures than the R22 units.
There are different types of refrigerant oils. Refrigerants such as R22 and R12 usually use mineral oil. But some of blended refrigerants like R410A can sometimes use a poly oil. These oils can not be blended together. So a system that already has a refrigerant with mineral oil must be charged with refrigerants with the same oil.
if the timing chain and tensioners are worn out the chain will wear a hole in the timing cover and the oil will get into the water jacket and the antifreeze will get into the oil high time to fix it
Wal-Mart do not have r22 freon, this is a false ad.
Your AC won't work any better than it did before. Two very different refrigerants, which will not blend, with different superheat points and system pressures. Not to mention that R22 won't carry PAG oil through the system as effectively as 134a, meaning you could end up starving your compressor of lubricating oil, thus burning it out.
r22a
No
No
12 r22