Help: Recharging AC on 96 G Voyager SE

Discussion in 'Voyager' started by The White Family, May 30, 2005.

  1. Hello all,

    I read in the Haynes manual when I recharge the AC system with very low
    Freon I have to short a switch/sensor for which turns on the compressor
    but it does not tell in detail where this is located.
    Can somebody who has had to this on my model or similar model point me in
    detail or even better send me a pic of that switch/sensor in the engine
    compartment.

    Thanks,

    Greg
     
    The White Family, May 30, 2005
    #1
  2. Don't do this! A better way is to get a bowl of hot water, not boiling,
    just as hot out
    of the tap as you can make it, and immerse the freon can in it. The heat
    from the bowl
    will supply the heat needed by the can for it's contents to vaporize and go
    into the A/C
    system. Once you have a can or two in there then the A/C compressor will
    start cycling.

    Ted
     
    Ted Mittelstaedt, May 30, 2005
    #2
  3. The White Family

    jdoe Guest

    Do not put Freon in it either. It takes R134.
    LArry
     
    jdoe, May 30, 2005
    #3
  4. The White Family

    mic canic Guest

    the best way is have the car tested for a leak which you have and i would bet
    it's at the evap. coil
    remember r134 is still freon and is escaping into the air
    and the sealers you see in the recharge kits react with air so when it reacts
    with the air in your plumbing guess what gets plugged up too
     
    mic canic, May 30, 2005
    #4
  5. The White Family

    gary Guest

    R134 is Freon? I thought Freon was banned in auto AC use?
     
    gary, Jun 2, 2005
    #5
  6. Freon is becoming a generic word meaning A/C refrigerant much like kleenex
    has become a
    generic word meaning tissue - of course the manufacturers of both are
    fighting it...

    Ted
     
    Ted Mittelstaedt, Jun 2, 2005
    #6
  7. The White Family

    Steve Guest

    R-12 isn't even "Freon." "Freon" was DuPont's trademarked name for their
    line of refrigerants.

    But in common parlance, any refrigerant is "freon" just like any facial
    tissue is a "kleenex" and any adhesive bandage is a "band-aid." Deal
    with it.
     
    Steve, Jun 2, 2005
    #7
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