
Originally Posted by
ladas
If the 'coolness' goes after running for a while - tends to suggest that the evap maybe icing - after you stop and park for a while - is there a lot of condenser water under the vehicle.
The stat on the evap coil is there to stop serious freezing and should switch when the coil is less than 0 Deg C - it may take a while for the 'ice' to reach the sensor.
Icing is caused by three or four things things
Lack of airflow across the coil
Insufficient Refrigerant Gas
Faulty Expansion Valve
Blockage in the system between the condenser and the expansion device
Expansion valves do fail but very rarely
Blockages - reciever driers or TX valves can get bunged up
Airflow, unfortunately this is a self agravating situation - you have low air flow so the coil begins to freeze - and the ice forms it reduces the airflow even more - and thus it goes on
Insufficient refrigerant - this is the 'normal' cause for coil freezing in auto AC
If you could get me the suction and discharge pressures that would help
..... if not - do a feel test - but be careful as some pipes are quite hot.
Pipe from compressor to condenser coil (the one by the radiator) this pipe should be hot - too hat to hang onto for any length of time
Pipe from the condenser to the reciever drier - this should be warm to the touch - if its still hot then the condenser / and or fans are not operating properly due to air blockages / dirt.
The pipe from the reciever drier to the TX valve or firewall - this should be just the same as the pipe prior to the reciever - if there is a vast difference in temp means the reciever drier has a blockage.
The pipe from the firewall to the compressor (larger pipe) should be cold to the touch at the firewall - if its not cold and all the other pipes are ok then it indicates either a faulty tx valve, a refrigerant overcharge - or strangely enough an undercharge
If it is very cold and icing is on the pipe at the firewall then its overcharged.
I'll do a sketch and post it
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