134a Refrigerant
#3511
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
> Nice strawman
not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
> And stupid ----s like you refuse to look beyond the cartoon version of
> their service manual _Refrigeration_for_Dummys_.
this coming from someone arguing a point about an industry he's totally
ignorant in because of what he read on google. ha! :-)
> I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
> population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
> engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
is what makes you an ignorant ----.
> I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
> word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
> Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
industry. BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
defines freon as a trademark.
> Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer. do you have any
idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
> Nice strawman
not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
> And stupid ----s like you refuse to look beyond the cartoon version of
> their service manual _Refrigeration_for_Dummys_.
this coming from someone arguing a point about an industry he's totally
ignorant in because of what he read on google. ha! :-)
> I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
> population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
> engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
is what makes you an ignorant ----.
> I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
> word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
> Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
industry. BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
defines freon as a trademark.
> Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer. do you have any
idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#3512
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
> Nice strawman
not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
> And stupid ----s like you refuse to look beyond the cartoon version of
> their service manual _Refrigeration_for_Dummys_.
this coming from someone arguing a point about an industry he's totally
ignorant in because of what he read on google. ha! :-)
> I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
> population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
> engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
is what makes you an ignorant ----.
> I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
> word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
> Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
industry. BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
defines freon as a trademark.
> Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer. do you have any
idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
> Nice strawman
not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
> And stupid ----s like you refuse to look beyond the cartoon version of
> their service manual _Refrigeration_for_Dummys_.
this coming from someone arguing a point about an industry he's totally
ignorant in because of what he read on google. ha! :-)
> I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
> population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
> engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
is what makes you an ignorant ----.
> I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
> word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
> Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
industry. BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
defines freon as a trademark.
> Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer. do you have any
idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#3513
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
> Nice strawman
not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
> And stupid ----s like you refuse to look beyond the cartoon version of
> their service manual _Refrigeration_for_Dummys_.
this coming from someone arguing a point about an industry he's totally
ignorant in because of what he read on google. ha! :-)
> I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
> population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
> engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
is what makes you an ignorant ----.
> I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
> word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
> Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
industry. BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
defines freon as a trademark.
> Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer. do you have any
idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
> Nice strawman
not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
> And stupid ----s like you refuse to look beyond the cartoon version of
> their service manual _Refrigeration_for_Dummys_.
this coming from someone arguing a point about an industry he's totally
ignorant in because of what he read on google. ha! :-)
> I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
> population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
> engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
is what makes you an ignorant ----.
> I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
> word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
> Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
industry. BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
defines freon as a trademark.
> Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer. do you have any
idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#3514
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Nathan W. Collier wrote:
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
#3515
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Nathan W. Collier wrote:
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
#3516
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Nathan W. Collier wrote:
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
#3517
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
Nathan W. Collier wrote:
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
> "jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
> news:DiNDe.13026$N91.269@trnddc08...
>
>>Nice strawman
> not a strawman. i was making the point that you can find websites to
> support most any view you care to take. that doesnt make it factual.
>
Google: [Freon Refrigeration]
Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration]
come back using the word generically.
Google: [Hitler Hero]
I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
>
>>I *am* saying that their branding was too good and for the majority of the
>>population, including the examples I provided of more than a score of
>>engineering firms, Freon is a generic term.
>
>
> only to the _ignorant_ which is what ive stated from the beginning. using
> the term is why i called you ignorant. defending its usage as industry
> terminology in the face of someone within the industry telling you otherwise
> is what makes you an ignorant ----.
Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes (and provide cites) rather than just
trusting your "word" for it. I understand that you believe what your
saying is correct, but you need to lift your view from the narrow scope
of your trade magazines and training manuals, which BTW, most likely
have DuPont as a paid advertiser.
>
>>I simply demonstrated the fundamental error in your statement that the
>>word Freon is NEVER used as a generic term for CFCs/a Class of
>>Refrigerants/a chemical compound.
>
> i didnt say it was never used. i said it was never used within the
> industry.
And I provided dozens of examples of it being used generically "within
the *Industry*", or are you judge and jury about who gets included "in
the industry".
> BOTTOM LINE, you stated "freon is a compound". dictionary.com
> defines freon as a trademark.
Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
>
>>Ok then, I am still waiting to see these puddles of freon of yours!
>
> concentration. i know that the wind will blow it around a mix it up, but
> its not going to carry it all the way to the ozone layer.
Why not?
> do you have any idea how short the life of chlorine is in sunlight?
Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*. However that
said, you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the
chemical compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
Thank you for an excellent example of a genericized term in common
usage, that to most of the world seems quite obvious, but one that an
"insider" may take exception to.
Cl2+H2O-> HCl+HOCl 4(HOCl)-> 2(H20)+O2+Cl2
--
jeff
#3518
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:ICRDe.11548$JJ.8736@trnddc09...
> Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration] come
> back using the word generically.
lol i dont care what websites you can find it has nothing to do with real
world usage. why dont you call a refrigeration company in your local area
and ask them for yourself before preaching from your pedestal of ignorance?
> Google: [Hitler Hero]
> I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
> Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
thats funny, i came up with several from a simple google search. for one,
http://www.americannaziparty.com/ with my point being that you can find a
website to support any view you so choose. that doesnt give your position
any credibility.
> Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes
lol....yes, 15 minutes in google is worth far more than many years of first
hand experience! <rolling eyes>
its cool jeff, the ignorant wallows in ignorance theres nothing new there.
that youre WRONG as clearly defined by dictionary.com obviously means
nothing to you.
> Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
> http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
expands upon, but does not define.
> Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
> or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*.
lol can you give me ANYTHING to prove that assinine statement?
> you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the chemical
> compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
oh yeah? what about pure chlorine gas used in pools?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:ICRDe.11548$JJ.8736@trnddc09...
> Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration] come
> back using the word generically.
lol i dont care what websites you can find it has nothing to do with real
world usage. why dont you call a refrigeration company in your local area
and ask them for yourself before preaching from your pedestal of ignorance?
> Google: [Hitler Hero]
> I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
> Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
thats funny, i came up with several from a simple google search. for one,
http://www.americannaziparty.com/ with my point being that you can find a
website to support any view you so choose. that doesnt give your position
any credibility.
> Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes
lol....yes, 15 minutes in google is worth far more than many years of first
hand experience! <rolling eyes>
its cool jeff, the ignorant wallows in ignorance theres nothing new there.
that youre WRONG as clearly defined by dictionary.com obviously means
nothing to you.
> Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
> http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
expands upon, but does not define.
> Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
> or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*.
lol can you give me ANYTHING to prove that assinine statement?
> you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the chemical
> compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
oh yeah? what about pure chlorine gas used in pools?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#3519
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:ICRDe.11548$JJ.8736@trnddc09...
> Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration] come
> back using the word generically.
lol i dont care what websites you can find it has nothing to do with real
world usage. why dont you call a refrigeration company in your local area
and ask them for yourself before preaching from your pedestal of ignorance?
> Google: [Hitler Hero]
> I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
> Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
thats funny, i came up with several from a simple google search. for one,
http://www.americannaziparty.com/ with my point being that you can find a
website to support any view you so choose. that doesnt give your position
any credibility.
> Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes
lol....yes, 15 minutes in google is worth far more than many years of first
hand experience! <rolling eyes>
its cool jeff, the ignorant wallows in ignorance theres nothing new there.
that youre WRONG as clearly defined by dictionary.com obviously means
nothing to you.
> Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
> http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
expands upon, but does not define.
> Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
> or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*.
lol can you give me ANYTHING to prove that assinine statement?
> you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the chemical
> compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
oh yeah? what about pure chlorine gas used in pools?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:ICRDe.11548$JJ.8736@trnddc09...
> Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration] come
> back using the word generically.
lol i dont care what websites you can find it has nothing to do with real
world usage. why dont you call a refrigeration company in your local area
and ask them for yourself before preaching from your pedestal of ignorance?
> Google: [Hitler Hero]
> I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
> Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
thats funny, i came up with several from a simple google search. for one,
http://www.americannaziparty.com/ with my point being that you can find a
website to support any view you so choose. that doesnt give your position
any credibility.
> Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes
lol....yes, 15 minutes in google is worth far more than many years of first
hand experience! <rolling eyes>
its cool jeff, the ignorant wallows in ignorance theres nothing new there.
that youre WRONG as clearly defined by dictionary.com obviously means
nothing to you.
> Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
> http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
expands upon, but does not define.
> Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
> or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*.
lol can you give me ANYTHING to prove that assinine statement?
> you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the chemical
> compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
oh yeah? what about pure chlorine gas used in pools?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
#3520
Guest
Posts: n/a
Re: 134a Refrigerant
"jeff" <jalowe44INVALID@hotmail.com.INVALID> wrote in message
news:ICRDe.11548$JJ.8736@trnddc09...
> Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration] come
> back using the word generically.
lol i dont care what websites you can find it has nothing to do with real
world usage. why dont you call a refrigeration company in your local area
and ask them for yourself before preaching from your pedestal of ignorance?
> Google: [Hitler Hero]
> I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
> Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
thats funny, i came up with several from a simple google search. for one,
http://www.americannaziparty.com/ with my point being that you can find a
website to support any view you so choose. that doesnt give your position
any credibility.
> Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes
lol....yes, 15 minutes in google is worth far more than many years of first
hand experience! <rolling eyes>
its cool jeff, the ignorant wallows in ignorance theres nothing new there.
that youre WRONG as clearly defined by dictionary.com obviously means
nothing to you.
> Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
> http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
expands upon, but does not define.
> Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
> or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*.
lol can you give me ANYTHING to prove that assinine statement?
> you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the chemical
> compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
oh yeah? what about pure chlorine gas used in pools?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com
news:ICRDe.11548$JJ.8736@trnddc09...
> Seven out of the first ten hits out of 47K) for [Freon Refrigeration] come
> back using the word generically.
lol i dont care what websites you can find it has nothing to do with real
world usage. why dont you call a refrigeration company in your local area
and ask them for yourself before preaching from your pedestal of ignorance?
> Google: [Hitler Hero]
> I checked the first four pages of links, and other than Arnold praising
> Adolph, I came up with no links supporting a positive view.
thats funny, i came up with several from a simple google search. for one,
http://www.americannaziparty.com/ with my point being that you can find a
website to support any view you so choose. that doesnt give your position
any credibility.
> Sorry bub, I'll trust my own eyes
lol....yes, 15 minutes in google is worth far more than many years of first
hand experience! <rolling eyes>
its cool jeff, the ignorant wallows in ignorance theres nothing new there.
that youre WRONG as clearly defined by dictionary.com obviously means
nothing to you.
> Yes, and I've shown usage beyond that.
> http://reference.allrefer.com/encyclopedia/F/Freon.html
expands upon, but does not define.
> Given that sunlight rarely causes transmutation of elements, ummmm, plus
> or minus a couple of billion years, I'd say *infinite*.
lol can you give me ANYTHING to prove that assinine statement?
> you may be thinking of hypochlorous acid (HOCl) which is the chemical
> compound that referred to as "chlorine" in your swimming pool.
oh yeah? what about pure chlorine gas used in pools?
--
Nathan W. Collier
http://InlineDiesel.com
http://7SlotGrille.com
http://UtilityOffRoad.com
http://BighornRefrigeration.com