>> Does anybody know if the Accords from '98 - '02 have a "sight glass"
>> anywhere in the A/C lines to visually check the R-134a level without
[quoted text clipped - 23 lines]
>
> 'Curly'
Yup, that actually _is_ something I did on my own since I didn't want to
pay the dealer $109 for the labor disassembling virtually everything on
the front-passenger side under the glove compartment.
Airflow has never been a problem. However, ever since the car was new
the air coming out of the vents (with A/C and RECIRC both off and with
the temperature dial all the way to Cold) always was slightly warmer
than the outside air. I assumed it was unavoidable that any incoming
air would pick up some heat from the heater core - my '92 was the same
way. In any case, the difference in A/C performance when I'm at freeway
speeds versus sitting idle at stoplights is much more obvious lately.
That difference was only slight in previous years.
Michael Pardee - 23 Jul 2005 14:21 GMT
>>> Does anybody know if the Accords from '98 - '02 have a "sight glass"
>>> anywhere in the A/C lines to visually check the R-134a level without
[quoted text clipped - 36 lines]
> sitting idle at stoplights is much more obvious lately. That difference
> was only slight in previous years.
Mostly, that sounds like the compressor is going bad. The valve plates leak
and otherwise don't perform well, and that effect is minimized when the the
engine is turning faster. An '02 sounds awfully new for that, though -
usually it takes about 10 years to reach that point.
Another possibility is that the condensor fan has quit. The airflow on the
road takes over to make the fan unimportant while cruising. The fan is
something you can check yourself, while the bad compressor is a conclusion
even the experts reach when everything else checks out okay.
If the refrigerant is low, the cooling is the same at idle as at speed, but
the compressor cycles more often at speed than at idle.
Mike
Mike Cooper - 23 Jul 2005 17:37 GMT
>>>>Does anybody know if the Accords from '98 - '02 have a "sight glass"
>>>>anywhere in the A/C lines to visually check the R-134a level without
[quoted text clipped - 51 lines]
>
> Mike
More details: if the compressor is in fact going bad, is it possible
that visible "vapor" coming out of the inside vents is a symptom of that
failure? It rarely happens, but at 26K miles I reported this to the
dealer during a routine maintenance visit (it was documented but they
couldn't find a problem at the time). So there is a chance I could get
this fixed under warranty since I reported it early on, even though the
warranty has since expired. Compressor fan is OK.
Mike Cooper - 23 Jul 2005 17:47 GMT
>>>>> Does anybody know if the Accords from '98 - '02 have a "sight
>>>>> glass" anywhere in the A/C lines to visually check the R-134a level
[quoted text clipped - 60 lines]
> this fixed under warranty since I reported it early on, even though the
> warranty has since expired. Compressor fan is OK.
Lemme correct that last sentence - condensor fan is OK. Tells you how
much I know about A/C....
Grahame - 23 Jul 2005 15:00 GMT
If the dial is all the way cold then no coolant should be flowing through
the heater core. This was a common problem on the 92 and was a result of the
cable adjustment on the heater core coolant valve.
> >> Does anybody know if the Accords from '98 - '02 have a "sight glass"
> >> anywhere in the A/C lines to visually check the R-134a level without
[quoted text clipped - 36 lines]
> speeds versus sitting idle at stoplights is much more obvious lately.
> That difference was only slight in previous years.