I finally got around to replacing my ac compressor in my 91. Well, that is, I got the compressor out of the car.
For some context, I had the car converted to r134a by a shop, but they didn’t tighten one of the fittings all the way. I took it back, they tightened the fitting and they recharged with another round of R134a, then they ran it for a while. But then when I went to pick it up, they had it on the lift and the compressor was all covered in oil.
When I finally got the compressor out of the car, it seemed pretty clear that the leakage was from the pressure relief valve. You can see here it is extremely green inside of the valve opening.
My thought was to just replace the valve as a precautionary measure. But it’s a discontinued part for the 91 and 92 cars. I have the updated part from the later cars, but the threads are much coarser and it doesn’t fit.
Anyone know if these valves go bad? It’s possible the valve is fine and something else caused the high pressure, triggering the release valve. E.g bad compressor? an overcharge? or maybe a clogged condenser or something (I flushed them both tho)?
I read on another forum that you should replace them after they trip. Is that true?
I have a couple options
1. Run the old valve and hope for the best. If it is bad, I have to tear the whole thing apart again.
2. Buy a brand new flange connector “suction service” thing from Honda for the R134A cars (38838-PR7-A01)
3. Find a used flange from a prime member (omg if you have one from a 93+ car please let me know)
I’m leaning toward option 2 for safety, but it puts me out another week.
Anyone know the risk that the old one is bad? Would you replace it? Any tests I can do? The service manual only has instructions to remove / install it.
For some context, I had the car converted to r134a by a shop, but they didn’t tighten one of the fittings all the way. I took it back, they tightened the fitting and they recharged with another round of R134a, then they ran it for a while. But then when I went to pick it up, they had it on the lift and the compressor was all covered in oil.
When I finally got the compressor out of the car, it seemed pretty clear that the leakage was from the pressure relief valve. You can see here it is extremely green inside of the valve opening.
My thought was to just replace the valve as a precautionary measure. But it’s a discontinued part for the 91 and 92 cars. I have the updated part from the later cars, but the threads are much coarser and it doesn’t fit.
Anyone know if these valves go bad? It’s possible the valve is fine and something else caused the high pressure, triggering the release valve. E.g bad compressor? an overcharge? or maybe a clogged condenser or something (I flushed them both tho)?
I read on another forum that you should replace them after they trip. Is that true?
I have a couple options
1. Run the old valve and hope for the best. If it is bad, I have to tear the whole thing apart again.
2. Buy a brand new flange connector “suction service” thing from Honda for the R134A cars (38838-PR7-A01)
3. Find a used flange from a prime member (omg if you have one from a 93+ car please let me know)
I’m leaning toward option 2 for safety, but it puts me out another week.
Anyone know the risk that the old one is bad? Would you replace it? Any tests I can do? The service manual only has instructions to remove / install it.