If you replaced the condensor you're going to need the a/c refilled professionally. The ONLY way to properly fill the system after such service is to pull a vacuum to completely remove air/moisture then refill.
If you replaced the condensor you're going to need the a/c refilled professionally. The ONLY way to properly fill the system after such service is to pull a vacuum to completely remove air/moisture then refill.
I can't even believe it.. I disagree with Matt.
If you have the right equipment (ac manifold gauge and vacuum pump) you can do it yourself. That said I don't own those tools so I've been going back and forth on whether to buy them or pay someone. I just don't trust shops, so I'm more inclined to buy the tools and handle it myself. The only real question mark is how much oil is still in the system, from everything I've read the pros even guess at that though since they aren't pulling all the oil from the compressor before refilling the system.
The nice part about owning the tools and doing it yourself is that you can put the vacuum on the system and verify that you actually don't have any leaks, I expect a shop wouldn't test for a good sealed system for more than an hour or so since they need to move vehicles in and out so quickly.
As far as the ports go there is a low side (before the compressor) and a high side (after the compressor) and you fill into the low side. You put enough refrigerant in to meet the psi level that is appropriate for the external temp/humidity. The low/high side have different size connectors so you can't really mix them up when you have the right equipment to plug into them.
Hey now Jacob you didn't completely disagree with me. I guess I wasn't expecting that someone would want to buy the tools to refill their A/C since its not something that's done often.
My system was completely empty. while Dan (my fab guy) was working my bumper a bar had fallen and put a hole in the condenser. When it was replaced anything that was in the system was removed. I did not check for leaks before filling, based off of the fact everything was ok before the mishap. I picked this up (Quest/R-134a Sub Zero refrigerant). I used the fitting close to the firewall on the passenger side, that appeared to be the best bet per the instructions. Based off the gage that came with it, one bottle was just shy of full. It seems to be working great. I will run for a few days & might pick up a small bottle that works with the kit to top it off at full.
Will see how it goes from here.
BTW thanks guys for your input.
The funny thing is it never gets hot here & when the ac went down we get a heat wave high 80's. Here it is a heat wave, also the humidity was high which is not normal here. so this last week sucked.
Last edited by pjmjr508; 07-20-2013 at 12:20 AM.
PJMJR508
(Happy Jeep)
Sorry man but any moisture that's left in the system will cause issues. There's a significant amount of air/moisture that don't play nice with the pump and corrode the internals of the system. It's probably worse than throwing non HOAT antifreeze in your reservoir tank.
I know you say you don't use A/C much, but if you plan on keeping that XK for a while you're shooting yourself in the foot.
I'm thinking the tools cost less than the labor so it's a solid investment and you know on the old rusty xj something else is going to spring a leak sooner or later.
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