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Car Forum / Chrysler Cars / July 2006

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AC Compressor - Clutch engages then disengages

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psykobillys - 10 Jul 2006 20:40 GMT
My AC compressor clutch went out a few weeks ago - the bearing in it
completely disentigrated, lots of smoke, not much fun.  Anyhow, I go to
a local salvage yard and pick up an entire compressor with clutch (you
can only buy the new clutch alone from the stealership, which costs as
much as the entire clutch and compressor new from the local parts
stores).  My thought was to simply replace the clutch and end up having
a spare compressor.  Upon finishing the tortuous task of replacing the
clutch, I discovered that the problem was the entire compressor.  I
evacuated the system at a local shop and replaced the compressor.  I
then refilled the system.  Now, the compressor just cycles.  The clutch
engages for a minute or so, then disengages for a minute or two. What's
going on???
Obviously I'm not an AC guy...but I live in the Sacramento Valley, so I
NEED it to work!
-Psykobillys
TNKev - 10 Jul 2006 22:24 GMT
> My AC compressor clutch went out a few weeks ago - the bearing in it
> completely disentigrated, lots of smoke, not much fun.  Anyhow, I go
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
> I NEED it to work!
> -Psykobillys

It could be overcharged or undercharged or the "new" compressor you
got(likely without warranty)is bad.
you need to take it to an "AC guy", or where people are trained in AC, like
at the "stealership" as you call it.
sometimes paying a little more for a professional to do the work is worth
it.

kmatheson@sisna.com - 10 Jul 2006 22:47 GMT
> > My AC compressor clutch went out a few weeks ago - the bearing in it
> > completely disentigrated, lots of smoke, not much fun.  Anyhow, I go
[quoted text clipped - 18 lines]
> sometimes paying a little more for a professional to do the work is worth
> it.

I agree that it may be an overcharge/undercharge situation. Also, I did
not see any mention of a vacuum being pulled on the system once the
used compressor was installed. Sometimes a vacuum followed by a charge
will solve the problem.

-KM
aarcuda69062 - 11 Jul 2006 01:14 GMT
In article
<1152560412.620122.36580@h48g2000cwc.googlegroups.com>,

> My AC compressor clutch went out a few weeks ago - the bearing in it
> completely disentigrated, lots of smoke, not much fun.  Anyhow, I go to
[quoted text clipped - 11 lines]
> NEED it to work!
> -Psykobillys

Sounds like the original compressor disintegrated; what steps
were taken to clean the system of contamination, i.e., was the
system flushed?
Did you replace the receiver/drier?
How was the oil level determined to be accurate/adequate?
Was the system refilled with virgin refrigerant with out any
additives?
Since we have no idea what vehicle this is, what type of cooling
fans is it equipped with, and are they functioning as they should?
Did you plug off all hoses and fittings while you were changing
out the second compressor?
Was the system put under vacuum after the compressor change,
before it was recharged?  How many microns was it evacuated to,
how long did it hold at XXXX microns?
Low side pressure?
High side pressure?
Single AC system or dual AC system?
 
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