| | |  | Car Repair & Auto Repair is our Speciality We perform car repair & auto repair all cars, Foreign and Domestic. Just give us a call or contact us online to set up and an car repair appointment. We check our online car repair appointments once a day and will contact you within 24 hours. For immediate assistance call us 858.270.1142. Our Services: Auto Air Conditioning Repair
- Realize that auto AC is basically a refrigerator in a weird layout. It's
designed to move heat from one place (the inside of your car) to some other
place (the outdoors). While a complete discussion of every specific model and
component is well outside the scope of this article, this should give you a
start on figuring out what the problem might be and either fixing it yourself or
talking intelligently to someone you can pay to fix it.
- Become familiar with the five major components to auto air
conditioning:
- the compressor, which compresses the refrigerant in the system (on modern
cars, usually a substance called R-134a)
- the refrigerant, which carries the heat
- the condensor, which gets hot when the compressed refrigerant goes through
it
- the expansion valve, which isn't really a valve at all but more like a
nozzle
- the dryer/evaporator, which adds heat to the refrigerant, cooling your
car
- Understand the air conditioning process: The compressor puts the refrigerant
under pressure and sends it to the condensing coils. In your car, these coils
are generally in front of the radiator. Compressing a gas provides two results:
First, the gas gets quite hot. When it is very hot, the outside air is cooler
and heat can leave the gas. When the gas has cooled, remember that it is under
pressure; it condenses into a liquid and this phase change makes it hotter. The
refrigerant now loses huge amounts of heat. The liquid is then sent to the
evaporator, the coils inside of your car. It is still a bit hot, but it is a
liquid under pressure. There it goes through the expansion valve, finds a low
pressure and evaporates. Evaporation requires a lot of heat energy, so the vapor
gets cold. It is this phase change from liquid to gas that really causes the
temperature to change. This cold gas vapor chills the evaporator, and your car's
blower blows air through the cold evaporator and into the interior. The
refrigerant goes back through the cycle again and again.
- Check to see if all the R-134a leaks out (meaning there's nothing in the
loop to carry away heat). Leaks are easy to spot but not easy to fix without
pulling things apart. Most auto-supply stores carry a fluorescent dye that can
be added to the system to check for leaks, and it will have instructions for use
on the can. If there's a bad enough leak, the system will have no pressure in it
at all. Find one of the valve-stem-looking things and poke a pen in there to try
to valve off pressure, and if there IS none, that's the problem.
- Make sure the compressor is turning. Start the car, turn on the AC and look
under the hood. The AC compressor is generally a pumplike thing off to one side
with large rubber and steel hoses going to it. It will not have a filler cap on
it, but will often have one or two things that look like the valve stems on a
bike tire. The pulley on the front of the compressor exists as an outer pulley
and an inner hub which turns when an electric clutch is engaged. If the AC is on
and the blower is on, but the center of the pulley is not turning, then the
compressor's clutch is not engaging. This could be a bad fuse, a wiring problem,
a broken AC switch in your dash, or the system could be low on refrigerant (most
systems have a low-pressure safety cutout that will disable the compressor if
there isn't enough refrigerant in the system).
- Look for other things that can go wrong: bad switches, bad fuses, broken
wires, broken fan belt (preventing the pump from turning), or seal failure
inside the compressor.
- Feel for any cooling at all. If the system cools, but not much, it could
just be low pressure, and you can top up the refrigerant. Most auto-supply
stores will have a kit to refill a system, and it will come with instructions.
Do not overfill!
Tips
- If you suspect bad wiring, most compressors have a wire leading to the
electric clutch. Find the connector in the middle of that wire, and unplug it.
Take a length of wire and run it from the compressor's wire to the plus (+) side
of your battery. If you hear a loud CLACK, the electric clutch is fine and you
should check the car's wiring and fuses. If you get nothing, the electric clutch
is bad and the compressor will have to be replaced. Ideally, if you can do this
test while the car is running, you can see if the hub spins. That would rule out
a clutch that actuates properly but then slips so badly it won't generate
pressure.
- If your system is empty and you're refilling it, and have access to a small
vacuum pump (like what they'd use in a lab or shop), it's best to suck all the
air out of the system before filling it. Air contains moisture, and moisture is
bad in AC systems because it corrodes things.
- Your system will have a light oil in it. If you vent off any refrigerant, be
prepared to wipe some oil off things nearby.
- Another possible replacement refrigerant is HC12a which is used quite a bit
more in Europe. It performs better than R-134a or R12. It is more flammable.
HC12a is more eco friendly than R12 or R134a. Venting HC12a is not believed to
cause environmental damage. Must be ordered on the internet as local shops do
not seem to stock it. The issue is that shops will not work on a car that has
other regrigerants in it. Special equipment is needed for each type of
refrigerant's recovery. Standard R12 or R134a is a safer choice.
Warnings
- Be extremely cautious about converting your old R-12 system to R-134a. The
R-134a conversion kits sold at Auto Parts stores and even WalMart, are called
"Black Death Kits" by some AC repairmen. Frequently, the new R-134a refrigerant
will not circulate the R-12 oil and you will burn up your compressor. The R-12
mineral oil has chlorine contaminants that will destroy the R-134a PAG or POE
special oil. The only way to reliably convert from R-12 to R-134a is to remove
the compressor and flush out all the old oil with the new type of oil; then
replace the old Receiver-Dryer or Accumulator with a new one; then flush out all
the lines, the evaporator, and the condensor with special cleaner then vacuum to
a steady vacuum; and finally charge with 70-80%, (by weight) of the original
R-12 weight, with R-134a; and expect poorer cooling ability. It is much easier
to keep the old R-12 system running with R-12 that is readily availabe via ebay.
- Venting refrigerant -- even R-134a -- is illegal in the United States, so
act accordingly.
- NEVER connect refrigerant cans, oil or leak-detector cans to the "high
pressure side" of the system. This is often marked with H or HIGH, or a red
connector cap. Cans can explode, and that would hurt.
- Stay away from major leaks of refrigerant. As it vents it will get cold
enough to freeze your skin.
- Look out for moving fan blades and fan belts!
- HC12 is a hydrocarbon, usually some mix of butane or propane. It will
explode with an ignition source. Light up a cigarette if you have an evaporator
leak and your car becomes a bomb. Professionals don't use it because of this
very reason.
Back to Services | | |
|
|  |
| Family Owned and Operated Car Repair San Diego & The Best Auto Repair Service - Pacific Beach Foreign & Domestic Car Repair San Diego has been in the auto repair service business since 1981. Our mission is to give you the best automotive service repair possible, keeping you safe and secure on the road with good, dependable transportation. We service all cars so whether you need bmw repair, mercedes repair, vw repair, toyota repair, honda repair, ford repair, chevy repair, chevorlet repair, lexus repair, acura repair, or other foreign car repair, we have you car repair San Diego covered. Pacific Beach Foreign & Domestic Car Repair is family owned and operated car repair San Diego and has been serving Pacific Beach for 25 years. We can help you with just about any auto repair service that you car needs: smog check, brake repair, brake car repair, car air conditioning repair, car air conditioner repair, repair car radiator, auto glass repair, auto electrical repair, auto glass repair San Diego, auto air conditioning repair, tune up. We are members of the BBB (Better Business Bureau) and are ASE Certified. |
|
| |