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COMPLIANCE INFO_PRE 2019
Environmental Health - Public
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EHD Program Facility Records by Street Name
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SINCLAIR
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2217 – Appliance Recycler Program
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PR0537053
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COMPLIANCE INFO_PRE 2019
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Entry Properties
Last modified
1/13/2025 9:57:37 AM
Creation date
8/31/2018 11:20:23 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
EHD - Public
ProgramCode
2217 – Appliance Recycler Program
File Section
COMPLIANCE INFO
FileName_PostFix
PRE 2019
RECORD_ID
PR0537053
PE
2217
FACILITY_ID
FA0019268
FACILITY_NAME
ECS REFINING LLC
STREET_NUMBER
2222
Direction
S
STREET_NAME
SINCLAIR
STREET_TYPE
Ave
City
Stockton
Zip
95215
APN
173-150-12
CURRENT_STATUS
04
SITE_LOCATION
2222 S Sinclair Ave
P_LOCATION
01
P_DISTRICT
001
QC Status
Approved
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EHD - Public
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0 • <br />TYPE II CERTIFICATION <br />Technicians maintaining, servicing, repairing or disposing of high pressure or very high-pressure appliances, except small <br />appliances and motor vehicle air conditioning systems, must be certified as a Type II Technician or a Universal <br />Technician. <br />LEAK DETECTION <br />After the installation of any type of system, the unit should first be pressurized with nitrogen (an inert gas) and leak <br />checked. In order to determine the general area of a leak use an electronic or ultrasonic leak detector. Once the general <br />area of the leak is located the use of soap bubbles will pinpoint the leak. <br />A refrigeration unit using an open compressor that has not been used in several months is likely to leak from the rotating <br />shaft seal. During a visual inspection of any type of system, traces of oil are an indicator of a refrigerant leak. Excessive <br />superheat, caused by a low refrigerant charge, is also an indication of a leak in a high-pressure system. <br />LEAK REPAIR REQUIREMENTS <br />EPA regulations require that all comfort cooling appliances containing more than 50 lbs. of refrigerant MUST be <br />repaired when the annual leak rate exceeds 15%. <br />EPA regulations require that all Commercial and Industrial Process Refrigeration containing more than 50 lbs. of <br />refrigerant MUST be repaired when the annual leak rate exceeds 35%. <br />RECOVERY TECHNIQUES <br />Proper recovery techniques begin with the use of appropriate recovery equipment that has been certified by an EPA <br />approved laboratory (UL or ETL) to meet or exceed ARI standards. <br />Recovered refrigerants may contain acids, moisture, and oil. It is therefore necessary to frequently check and change both <br />the oil and filter on a recycling machine. Both recycling and recovery equipment using hermetic compressors have the <br />potential to overheat when drawing a deep vacuum because the unit relies on the flow of refrigerant through the <br />compressor for cooling. Before using a recovery unit you should always check the service valve positions, the recovery <br />units oil level, and evacuate and recover any remaining refrigerant from the unit's receiver. <br />Technicians working with multiple refrigerants, before recovering and/or recycling a different refrigerant, must purge the <br />recover/recycle equipment by recovering as much of the first refrigerant as possible, change the filter, and evacuate. The <br />only exception to this rule is for technicians working with R -134A who must provide a special set of hoses, gauges, <br />vacuum pump, recovery or recovery/recycling machine, and oil containers to be used with R -1 34A only. <br />Although recovering refrigerant in the vapor phase will minimize the loss of oil, recovering as much as possible in the <br />liquid phase can reduce recovery time. The technician may choose to speed up the recovery process by packing the <br />recovery cylinder in, ice, and/or applying heat to the appliance. After recovering liquid refrigerant, any remaining vapor is <br />condensed by the recovery system. <br />When performing refrigerant system service on a unit that has a receiver/storage tank, refrigerant should be placed in the <br />receiver. Refrigerant should be removed from the condenser outlet if the condenser is below the receiver. In a building <br />that has an air-cooled condenser on the roof and an evaporator on the fust floor, recovery should begin from the liquid <br />line entering the evaporator:, <br />After recovery, refrigerant may be returned to the appliance from which it was removed or to another appliance owned by <br />the same person without being recycled or reclaimed, unless the appliance is an MVAC (Motor Vehicle Air Conditioner) <br />like appliance. The technician should always evacuate an empty recovery cylinder before transferring refrigerant to the <br />cylinder. Quick couplers, self-sealing hoses, or hand valves should be used (as low loss fittings) to minimize refrigerant <br />release when hoses are connected and disconnected. <br />RECOVERY REQUIREMENTS <br />Refrigerant Recovery and/or Recycling equipment manufactured after NovemberHHC�Uu VErj and labeled <br />by an EPA approved equipment testing organization to meet EPA standards. <br />MAY 18 2015 <br />ENVIRONMENTAL <br />
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