Steve,
I did the acid flush thing last year, and it made a huge difference in the performance of my AC systems. I have owned the boat since 2004 and had never done it, and have no idea of how long since it had been done. Here are the instructions I used, sent me on another list....
Condenser Coil Cleaning
1. With the system turned off at the circuit breaker on the ship s panel,
disconnect the inlet and outlet connections of the condenser coil.
2. Use chemical resistant hoses (MAS white PVC 5/8" I.D., etc.) to connect
the inlet of the condenser coil to the outlet of a chemical resistant, submersible pump (MAS P-500 pump, etc.) and let the hose connected to the coil outlet flow freely into the container mentioned below.
3. Place a strainer or piece of screen over the inlet of the pump and
submerse the pump into a container filled with a 5% solution of muriatic or hydrochloric acid and fresh water or use a premixed over-the-counter solution. Use a large container as possible to hold the solution (5-25 gallons). CAUTION: avoid spilling or splashing the solution. Always add acid to water. Follow all warnings and recommendations given by the manufacturer of any acids or pre-mixed solutions.
4. Power the pump and circulate the solution through the condenser coil for
15-45 minutes depending upon the size of the coils and the extent of the contamination. Visual inspection of the solution in the container should indicate when the contamination removal has stopped.
5. Circulate fresh water through the coil to flush any residual acid from
the system.
6. Restart the system and check operational parameters to ensure thorough
cleaning has taken place. Additional cleaning may be necessary with extreme contamination.
WARNING: For the purpose of protecting the environment, dispose of any
contaminated acid solutions in
accordance with federal, state and/or local regulations.
There is also a recommendation to cycle a reverse cycle unit to heat once a
month to exercise the reverse valve.
Few notes here. I used a 5-gallon bucket and it was almost too small. This stuff foams up like crazy as it eats away at the crud coming out of the coils. Fortunately I had another 5-gallon bucket handy and was able to scoop some of the foam into it.
Make sure the area is well ventilated.
I just used a cheap bilge pump and the existing 5/8 hoses. I had planned on replacing them anyway, so just used them for the flush then installed the new hoses.