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Originally Posted by JMorales
Thermosat sticking? Low pressure switch on AC?
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Thanx for the reply - I'm really totally stumped on this - here is what I've done so far:
I took it to a shop that did a $25 diagnosis - here's what they said:
Leakage at AC Compressor Seams - Will Need Compressor - Accumulator - Orifice Tube - Flush And Charge - and they wanted $950
Not having that kind of money - a friend and I decided to do the job ourselves...
Over the past 2 days - here's what we've done...
Replaced the Thermostat
Replaced the Compressor and Clutch (with remanufactured)
Replaced the High Pressure cutoff (on the back of the compressor)
Replaced the Accumulator
Replaced the Sensor on the Accumulator
Replaced the Orifice Tube
Pulled 28 pound vacuum for 30 minutes (held pressure)
Put in 1 can of Oil
Put in One Can of Freon
The pressure built up to 50 lbs - the system got just a hair above cool - but not at all "cold"...
When we put in the second can of Freon - the compressor started cycling every 5-10 seconds - and the system started blowing warmer air...
The compressor is kicking out at 185 lbs (high pressure side) then when the pressure drops - it kicks back in - then continues cycling...
The low side pressure is now reading 70 lbs (Is it safe to put in a third can of freon??? - this is Phoenix and it's hot outside...)
Having read that pulling the connector off of the sensor on the accumulator and jumpering across it - the compressor will (supposedly) keep running - we did this - but it didn't have any effect - the compressor continued to kick in and out anyway...
We've replaced everything that we can think of and it hasn't changed anything...
I'm beginning to wonder if the rebuilt compressor is defective???
No idea of what to try next...
Any help would be GREATLY appreciated!
Dennis