92 Accord A/C problem

Discussion in 'Accord' started by AKinAZ, Jun 9, 2005.

  1. AKinAZ

    AKinAZ Guest

    Made the mistake of not doing the work myself. Took my 92 Accord EX to have
    A/C looked at. The A/C was working in January, during the regular runs to
    keep the compressor oiled. Then the A/C stopped. At the same time I had
    the timing belt changed so I thought a connection might have gotten knocked
    loose. I did not spend much time looking as the days were still cool. Now
    the days are NOT (Arizona). I noted there was no pressure in the system and
    suspected a leak. I took the car to a local shop and asked them to see if
    the system would hold a vacuum. They said they pulled it down twice and it
    held for 45 minutes. Figuring the system was intact and puzzled by the lose
    of pressure, I had them convert to R-134a. When I picked the car up, I was
    told the conversion failed and was shown that the A/C would not put out cold
    air. Their diagnosis was a bad compressor.
    Being the disbelieving person I am I went to the parts store, bought a r-134
    charging system with a gauge and a 12 oz. can of r-134 with stop leak, leak
    detection dye and 2 oz. oil charge. I also got two additional 12 oz cans
    that were the r-134 and 2 oz oil but not the stop leak and dye. I charged
    the system first with the stop leak can and started the A/C system. I
    immediately started getting cold air output. I added the second can and
    looked under the car. There was a puddle of reddish oil and a fairly steady
    drip coming from the compressor area. The oil had a reddish ting which I
    attributed to the lead trace dye (non-UV type.) The drip tapered of to
    almost nothing. Peering around the alternator, I could see oil on the top
    of the compressor but not where it was coming from. The system was at first
    losing pressure and I could hear a hissing. this slowed then became
    inaudible. I figured the stop leak was doing it's job. The pressure loss
    slow down dramatically but there was still some. I bought the Interdynamics
    Maxi Seal two can stop leak kit, added the Metal Fix then the Seal Fix cans.
    The pressure seemed to be holding. So I topped the system off with two more
    cans containing r-134 and 2 oz of oil. This all happened over the course
    of the weekend. Monday I drive the car to work and notice the A/C
    compressor is making a very obvious whirring noise ( about like the sound of
    the engine when revved over 4K.) At idle I opened the hood and listened to
    the compressor and there is a noticeable sound of each compression stroke.
    Thinking there may be not enough oil (easier to check then too much) I added
    one 2 oz oil charge can. Seemed to make no change in the sound.

    The question at the end of all this is: Is the compressor bad, too much oil
    or too little? I would like to avoid the cost of replacing the compressor,
    but will if that is what it takes.
     
    AKinAZ, Jun 9, 2005
    #1
  2. Taking all that together, I'm sure you will have to replace the compressor
    soon. IIRC those things in the early 90s Hondas are expensive, so a lot of
    shopping around would be worth it. You should start searching now, although
    you can wait for a more convenient time to do the replacement - what can it
    hurt?

    The last time I replaced a compressor, it was on our '84 Dodge 600ES
    (LeBaron). $300 for the compressor without clutch or magnet, and it was on
    July 3 in Phoenix... 118 degrees, even in the garage. A memorable
    experience, I assure you.

    Mike
     
    Michael Pardee, Jun 10, 2005
    #2
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