I hate it when rubycon steals my thunder
While this will work on new installations (although a experienced installer runs into a leak on a flare fitting or leaking silphos joint about as frequently as Bill Gates bounces a check!) typically leaks are in fractions of ounces per month! A halide pump can find absolutely minuscule leaks where they frequently occur. Distribution tubes downstream of TXV/AVXs are trouble spots particularly if regular PM'ing is not performed on the unit or if the mechanic does not separate the cap tubes and they rub together, etc.
if your read the original post, he just had his compressor changed a month or two ago, that means that its a pretty substantial leak to go that fast. Either there is a leak or when the guys soldered the new donk in they let crap in the pipe and there is a blockage causing a low pressure fault.
Halide lamps arent allowed much anymore, the safety nazis have a problem with us using a large flame as an indicator. We have to use the electronic sniffers which are crap anyway. But, dunno bout america, but in australia if you read Australian Standards once you have identified that a system has a leak you must remove the refrigerant ASAP, lest you are dumping refrigerant to atmosphere, which is a major no no since we signed kyoto.
what would i know anyway, im just a hvac mechanic