SnowDrift
Ultra Conservative. ULTRA!
On our trip last weekend, the A/C, that had been working around home every time I drove my truck, quit about 5-7 minutes into the trip. Once we got there and it sat a bit, the A/C worked again. At our destination point, I put two cans (12 oz. ea.) of R134a in. On the return trip, it worked for 15-20 minutes and then quit. It worked one time after it quit when I was at idle about 5 minutes later, while still on our trip home. Now it works around home again on short trips. I had tried it occasionally on the 3 hour trip home and it didn't work at all, even at idle, after that one time I mentioned.
According to the gauge on the little recharge hose I bought, it reads low, but I didn't want to overcharge the system. It is a 2.0 lb. requirement. When it does work, it is ice cold. It doesn't act like I would think it would in that I would think it would go from cold to not-so-cold, and so on. This is either ice cold, or it's warm. It works every time I turn it on, around home, on demand.
Since I'm no A/C professional by any means, does this make sense? I don't recall the amount that they system holds, but I thought to put in one more can (12 oz.) and see what happens. I have an hour trip to make today, so it might be a good test for it before the weather starts to turn cold.
According to the gauge on the little recharge hose I bought, it reads low, but I didn't want to overcharge the system. It is a 2.0 lb. requirement. When it does work, it is ice cold. It doesn't act like I would think it would in that I would think it would go from cold to not-so-cold, and so on. This is either ice cold, or it's warm. It works every time I turn it on, around home, on demand.
Since I'm no A/C professional by any means, does this make sense? I don't recall the amount that they system holds, but I thought to put in one more can (12 oz.) and see what happens. I have an hour trip to make today, so it might be a good test for it before the weather starts to turn cold.