If the system was empty enough to pull a vacuum, then for sure you have a leak. If the system had a quantity of R12 in it before vacuuming, then pulling a vacuum is akin to releasing refrigerant (venting), and is illegal. It is wise to pressurize the empty system with nitrogen and check for leaks (and fix them) before charging.
I've been looking for someone to pressure test with nitrogen and not having much luck. Is it common practice?
Sorry to bring this back from the dead. but this may be useful to someone.
It's common to use inert dry gasses to pressure test a system. Garages tend to use Nitrogen for some reason.
You don't have to use Nitrogen to test for leaks. Just don't use refrigerant.
Any known-dry non-reactive gas that shouldn't be called a refrigerant by the EPA will do the job.
I use Argon from my TIG setup. It's readily available, to me, since I happen to have two 125cf Argon bottles for the TIG and two Argon CO2 blend bottles along with one straight CO2 bottle for MIG welding.
If you do party balloons or weld with exotic gasses... Helium from a bottle will work too.
Shop air ain't dry so you can't use that.
Propane is also known to the EPA as R290 refrigerant. so you can't use that even though it's not ozone depleting.