The only difference between a standard flare and an R410A flare is that the R410A flare needs a slightly wider/longer flare surface. You can do this easily using a standard flaring tool by simply extending the pipe about 1/16th of an inch further through the flare.
Making a high quality flare on copper tubing is absolutely ESSENTIAL when making flare connections for refrigeration circuits. In this video I guide you through that process and also show you a few tips and tricks for how to prepare the pipe by removing the burrs and reaming out the inside of the pipe after cutting it. We also take a look at a very low quality factory flare as a comparison to the new flare that we create.
The only difference between a standard flare and an R410A flare is that the R410A flare needs a slightly wider/longer flare surface. You can do this easily using a standard flaring tool by simply extending the pipe about 1/16th of an inch further through the flare.
Making a high quality flare on copper tubing is absolutely ESSENTIAL when making flare connections for refrigeration circuits. In this video I guide you through that process and also show you a few tips and tricks for how to prepare the pipe by removing the burrs and reaming out the inside of the pipe after cutting it. We also take a look at a very low quality factory flare as a comparison to the new flare that we create.
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